Copenhagen Suborbitals have posted a sketch for their future direction.
TDS-1 that started as a testbed for parachutes systems, in the lack of being able to perform droptests from airplanes in Denmark, is now the design of choice in CS.
Out is the tube design, and a more classic capsule design is adopted, based on the test and work with TDS-1. Most of the subsystems developed for TDS-1, can be transferred directly into the new capsule.
How the new capsule, called Tycho Deep Space 2, will end up looking, will be decided in the next couple of months. What is known that the diameter is reduced from 2 to 1,6 meter, and aluminum (alloy: AlMg3) is considered, as the material of choice, to reduce the weight of the new capsule. Weight of the capsule is expected to be 500 kg, with a LES system weighing the same.
At the moment the engine department is looking at propellant alternatives to LOX/Alcohol. CS is looking at the WFNA / furfuryl alcohol propellant combination, because it have some properties that would be useful. Since it is more storable than LOX, MLP Sputnik will be able to fuel the rocket in the port of Nexø before sailing to the launch area, leaving one stress factor on land. Another property is that this alternative got more energy than LOX/Alcohol, and that in the end determines the size of the tanks, and length of the rocket. CS have released a report on the work with the test engine called Spectra. Static test have been conducted September 9, and more are expected in the coming time.
Doing the fall and spring, tests of the TM65 will continue, with the goal of making it a stable 65 kN thrust engine, that first will be tested and launch alone, and finally in a cluster of 4 TM65 engines on the rocket that will launch TDS-2. It is hoped that the first launch with a rocket with a single TM65 engine will happen in summer 2013.
A November launch of the hybrid rocket Sapphire, is looking promising, and will give CS a first time chance to test an active guide rocket. Active guidance have been given top priority, and data is needed for the continued development of a reliable guiding system, for the use in future rockets. First one most likely a rocket with a single TM65 in 2013.