All Land Rovers are all wheel drive. Some have a locking transfer case.
Camels are not allowed to drive Land Rovers, even in Dubai. The only vehicles allowed to race in camel races are camels.
They were called LRVs (Lunar Roving Vehicles) and had no special name of their own, just "Rover".
The vehicles used on the Moon were designed with the Moon's gravity in mind. They would not function correctly on Earth. So the answer is that the Moon's gravity affects the lunar rovers in the same way as gravity affects cars and other vehicles on Earth.... it is what keeps them on the surface, and prevents from from floating off into space.
Three. Apollo 15, 16 and 17 each had Lunar Roving Vehicles (LRVs)
Moon rovers and ROV's (remote operated vehicles) usually used in deep sea exploration
The Rovers or The Blues
The lunar rovers which were used during the Apollo Missions were electric vehicles. They were designed and manufactured to operate in the low gravity vacuum of the moon. Power was provided by Silver Zinc Potassium Hydroxide non rechargeable batteries.
All the lunar rovers left by the Apollo astronauts are still on the lunar surface as there was no way to bring them back. There are three, but no currently operational roving vehicles.
No, Land Rovers have never been on Neptune. Neptune is a gas giant located in our solar system, and it does not have a solid surface for vehicles like Land Rovers to drive on. Additionally, the extreme distance and harsh environment of Neptune make it impossible for any human-made vehicle to reach there.
Oswaldtwistle Rovers F.C. was created in 1884.
Yes. As far as is known, the only research vehicles presently operating on the Martian surface are those placed there by the US, and the US' space exploration program is the only one to have landed hardware on Mars so far.