Breaking it down to a single failure.
"your ship fails in atmosphere"
First you need an occurrence where the ships life support system is totally compromised and dysfunctional. Next you need to have a situation where the system is totally unrepairable. Still, having an escape pod/lifeboat and leaving an otherwise functional ship just because of atmospheric issues is... well, just such an extreme measure. There are so many other ways of preparing and dealing with this situation.
Stocking some extra atmo canisters for the vacc suits? Rip out the seats on the bridge to make space to set up the 2,000 credit pressurized survival tent?
If all else fails, instead of abandoning the ship, how about trying to
1) patch the ships life support system from from the life support system in your emergency escape vehicle
2) jury rig some ducts going to the bridge from the emergency escape vehicle
3) operate the ship remotely from the safe environment of your "escape"/"emergency life support" pod
How about instead of an entire escape vehicle, just installing a more cost effective and space saving life support system as a backup for the bridge? Another perhaps in the common area for passengers?
Emergency berths, medicines, blah blah blah... it's been said many times, many ways.
Anyways, to me, there needs to be a tragic and likely extremely rare occurrence of multiple issues for abandoning a ship to be the viable and necessary option due to atmo issues.
Not saying there is are no scenarios where an escape pod/vehicle might be wise. So back to the OP
Tom Kalbfus said:
I was reading the Core Rulebook, and in the section of small craft, under Launch it says it is also termed a "life boat" So I am currently designing a ship that uses these launches as life boats. It has 14 "life boats" with 7 "life boats" mounted on each side. They are there in case the passengers and crew need to evacuate the ship. So how big a starship do you think this would be?
Lets just assume "in case the passengers and crew need to evacuate the ship". No matter how rare, such a situation could happen, especially if a ship operates in very remote areas where assistance from planetary and other sources is unlikely.
However, Tom, when you ask "how big a starship do you think this would be?", it is just shooting in the dark to answer this with the limited info available.
For starters, a large ship can be designed with minimum crew and few passengers, while a smaller ship can be designed for a larger crew and many times more passengers.