Comment No (Score 3, Insightful) 83
Just... no. Do not want.
Just... no. Do not want.
Perhaps it would be better if that wasn't the case...
I view BO's (heh) New Shepard as roughly on par with the risk of everyday commercial air flight. Some factors increase risk, while others (like the fact that the entire spacecraft is thoroughly checked out between flights and telemetered to heck and back) reduce risk. So overall I think it's probably a wash.
It goes straight up and comes straight back down. Atmospheric re-entry heating is a fraction of that of an orbital re-entry.
The capsule is aerodynamically stable on re-entry. The part that should point forward, will always point forward.
The flight is so short that even if atmospheric conditioning failed, as long as the capsule maintains pressure, there should be plenty of breathable atmo for the duration. This is reinforced by the fact that the New Shepard crew are not required to wear pressure suits.
The LES is a simple solid rocket motor - ignite and it will burn, no valves or propellant pressurization to worry about, so it is as sure to work as about anything else in this world, to get you away from the going-boom rocket behind (plus it has already been demostrated both in tests and in a real-life booster failure).
So, I don't think it was that much of a step for JB to ride the first crewed bird, from a technical perspective. And of course there's other reasons why he might want to be on the first flight, but I'll leave it to others to expound on those aspects...
Doing the Vulcan neck-pinch on the punk on the bus with the boombox was a good start...
Type louder, please.