A lot depends upon who, how, and why the FTLD comes in to being, and just how much space exposure time it takes.
If an FTL drive takes just a few hours of N-Space exposure, then the limited manned space flight capability is rather minimal in impact.
If, on the other hand, you can't jump til 20AU, we're unlikely to use it until someone else comes in.
Likewise, a gravitics are a key. If, for example, you can generate a 20-G "volume accelleration", (IE, everything in the affected volume is accellerated 20G in the same direction), people will tolerate 20+ G's no problem; essentially it will be free-fall.
If, on the other hand, gravitics provide a point-source thrust (IE, simply push the drive unit) there is little advantage over conventional thrust, and people will be limited highly in what they can tolerate, since they will be accelerated by the floor, not the drive. MT drives seem to be this type.
So, if gravitics provides the first type, and high G's, then Missions elsewhere might be extremely doable.
If an FTL drive takes just a few hours of N-Space exposure, then the limited manned space flight capability is rather minimal in impact.
If, on the other hand, you can't jump til 20AU, we're unlikely to use it until someone else comes in.
Likewise, a gravitics are a key. If, for example, you can generate a 20-G "volume accelleration", (IE, everything in the affected volume is accellerated 20G in the same direction), people will tolerate 20+ G's no problem; essentially it will be free-fall.
If, on the other hand, gravitics provide a point-source thrust (IE, simply push the drive unit) there is little advantage over conventional thrust, and people will be limited highly in what they can tolerate, since they will be accelerated by the floor, not the drive. MT drives seem to be this type.
So, if gravitics provides the first type, and high G's, then Missions elsewhere might be extremely doable.