> nobody got hurt when the tent ...got blown 60 feet in the air.
Safety is important.... so they hold a party in a hurricane ? ? ?
And it isn't like they are ignorant about aerodynamic lift....
> a mere $200,000.00 / head.
It ain't cheap.
Pretend you had a road that went straight up 100 miles.
Pretend you had a tire which could grip a straight-up road.
Now you need a car which can pull itself straight up.
The average car in Low gear can pull 0.3-0.4 Gee. We need a full 1 Gee plus a bit to spare.
The Low gear can be changed 3 times lower and pull 1 Gee. But top speed in low gear drops by a factor of 3. In my car, to about 12 MPH.
So 100 miles straight up is eight hours of FULL POWER.
My car gets 25 MPG at 65MPH or about 2.6 gallons per hour. But it does 65MPH with a small fraction of FULL POWER. It would burn at least 6 times more fuel flat-out. Like 16 gallons per hour, or 128 gallons to climb 100 miles.
We could gear-down more and go slower. Just less gallons per hour for more hours. Same general result. Way over 100 gallons.
My car does not hold 128 gallons. And that half-ton weight would require more power or more gear-down and longer climb. Say the car went from 3,000 pounds street to 4,000 pounds fueled for a long climb. The fuel or the time increases by a factor 4000/3000. Now we need 170 gallons. Which weighs 1,200 pounds. More than we calculated, so figure again.
After the first few miles, air is too thin for humans, so we have to carry air. Going by SCUBA tanks, that could be some more hundreds of pounds.
After the first few miles, air is too thin for engines. The weight of air an engine eats is much greater than the fuel. 80% of air is useless Nitrogen, but the Oxygen alone greatly increases our total weight. Which increases our fuel demand.
It's pretty easy to need more fuel than vehicle.
(We see why low-tech high-fliers from X-15 to SS2 like to use an air-breathing first stage. It is an enormous complication, but existing technology, and the less oxygen we finally have to lift the better.)
Since there is no straight-up road, Rutan had to add wings and such. The seating is similar to my car (6 instead of 5), but since this is a joy-ride, he had to supply enough room for joy. And then enough fuel to lift all that. I reckon the airframe runs 10,000 pounds, and it carries 20,000 pounds of assorted fuels (rubber, fertilizer, Virgin-brand bottled air for people, plus champagne).
20,000 pounds of rocket fuel must cost $100,000. (It may be rubber, but it is extra-Virgin over-tested rubber.) The jet lifter may drink $2.30/gallon oil but a LOT of it. Apparently they give some pre-shoot training in the jet-lifter, so nobody freaks in free-fall. The two fliers will cost many times more than the fuel they use in a dozen flights.Then there is hanger rental, insurance, pilots, rubber-stuffers..... It can't cost less than $400K to take four folks up and back, and sure could be over a million per trip even if the thing (both the aircraft and the business) holds together for a dozen trips.
$200K/seat may be low.
It's still orders of magnitude lower than other human-safe near-space transport, and I think $1K/pound may be low for space-junk delivery.