Introduction
I have shown below two different approaches to deriving the Schwarzschild radius. I know these are less rigorous than the derivation of the Schwarzschild solution however the $\frac{2GM}{c^{2}}$ term still shows up in the metric anyways which in a sense validates the classical method shown below.
Classical method
\begin{equation} \frac{GMm}{r} = \frac{1}{2}mv^{2} \:\:\:\text{and}\:\:\:v =c \:\:\rightarrow \:\: R_{S} = \frac{2GM}{c^{2}} \end{equation}
However the classical method seems less general because it seems to ignore the Lorenz transformations. I offer no judgments rather I am looking to understand why this derivation reconciles with the Schwarzschild metric better.
This next approach is analogous except we set the relativistic potential energy equal to the relativistic kinetic energy. Since we are working in a frame where the gravitating mass $M$ is centered at the origin we only apply the gamma factor to the small mass $m$.
Relativistic method
\begin{equation} \frac{GMm}{r\sqrt{1-\frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}}} = \frac{mc^{2}}{\sqrt{1-\frac{v^{2}}{c^{2}}}}-mc^{2} \:\:\:\text{and}\:\:\:v =c \rightarrow R_{S} = \frac{GM}{c^{2}} \end{equation}
I feel that the second derivation is more natural but I am somewhat unconvinced it is correct. I was hoping one of you fine stack exchange users could shed some words of wisdom.
relativistic potential energy
you wrote? $\endgroup$