Building a 25-meter (82ft) geodesic dome is a major engineering undertaking. At this scale, the structure moves from "temporary tent" territory into "permanent building" physics.
Based on the parameters provided, here is an analytical breakdown of your concerns.
1. Buckling Risk & Pipe Dimensions
The 90mm OD pipe with a 2mm wall thickness is highly concerning for a 25m span.
- D/t Ratio: Your Diameter-to-thickness ratio is 45. While this is efficient for weight, it makes the pipe susceptible to local buckling (crinkling) before it reaches its global Euler buckling limit.
- The "Neck" Weakness: Flattening the pipe is the "Achilles' heel" of this design. By flattening the end, you destroy the pipe's Moment of Inertia (\(I\)) at the most critical point. Under the compression loads of a 42 m/s wind, the pipe is likely to fold at the transition point where the round profile meets the flat section.
- Conclusion: For a 25m dome, 2mm is too thin. You should aim for at least 3.5mm to 4mm wall thickness to provide a safety margin against the extreme axial loads generated by coastal winds.
2. Frequency Choice: 8V vs. 6V
The choice between 8V and 6V at this scale involves a trade-off between member length and complexity.
- 8V Pros: Shorter struts reduce the risk of individual member buckling (\(P_{cr} \propto 1/L^2\)). It also creates a smoother surface for the PVC skin, reducing "pocketing" or flapping in the wind.
- 8V Cons: You are looking at over 2,000 struts. The cumulative "slop" or tolerance errors in 2,000+ connections can lead to structural instability or difficulty in closing the dome during assembly.
- Recommendation: Move to 6V with thicker-walled steel. A 6V frequency is a "sweet spot" for 20m–30m domes. The struts will be longer, but if you increase the pipe thickness/diameter, the assembly becomes significantly faster and the connections more robust.
3. Hub Requirements (The "No-Hub" Question)
At a 25m scale, the "Flattened-End" method is fundamentally unsafe for several reasons:
- Eccentric Loading: In a flattened-end connection, the center of the bolt is offset from the center axis of the pipe. This introduces a bending moment that the pipe was not designed to handle.
- Bolt Bearing Stress: With only 2mm of steel, the bolt can "egg out" the hole under the rhythmic vibration of coastal winds, eventually leading to catastrophic tearing.
- The Solution: You must use a hub system that preserves the pipe's round profile.
- Sleeve Hubs: Steel cylinders welded to a central plate where the pipe slides in and is pinned.
- Star Hubs: Thick laser-cut plates that bolt to the interior or exterior of the pipe without flattening it.
4. Uplift & Anchoring
A 25m dome with a PVC cover acts as a massive airfoil. In a 42 m/s wind, the lift generated can be several tons.
- The "Ring Beam": Do not rely on individual stakes. For sandy/rocky coastal soil, a reinforced concrete ring beam is the gold standard. It provides the necessary "dead weight" to counteract uplift.
- Soil Specifics:
- Sandy: Use helical anchors (ground screws) tied into the concrete beam.
- Rocky: Use chemical anchors (epoxy) with threaded rods drilled at least 500mm into the rock.
- Base Plates: Ensure your base hubs are heavy-duty steel plates with multiple anchor points, allowing for both vertical and shear (horizontal) force resistance.