some seeing eye wrote:Eye bolts are not designed for shear strength.

beer goggles wrote:some seeing eye wrote:Eye bolts are not designed for shear strength.
True, eyebolts don't like being loaded at 90 degrees but as long as I keep the "necks" short and put an eyebolt-anchor at each vertex (15 total) then I don't see any problem. Even taking the large surface area of a dome into consideration, the horizontal wind speed / lifting force required to cause catastrophic failure would be enormous.
Bob wrote:Those stakes look decent, though I like pairing stakes at opposing angles for the same reason drywall installers often pair nails when rocking a ceiling.
A 60-ft dome with a fitted vinyl cover eggshelled in a storm in 2000. Huge 20-ft dimple on the windward side. By the time I got there, the thing was repeatedly lifting ~6 inches and pounding back on the ground, and they were struggling with adding stakes and throwing guy lines over the top. The original staking was pretty minimal, just 1/2" rebar as I recall. After that incident, the company that made the dome (Pacific) also upgraded from 3/4" to 1" minimum conduit for domes that size.
melodiousdirge wrote:What do your stakes look like? I have the tops of mine doubled up and candy caned
beer goggles wrote:BTW - I saw the pics of your dome in another thread and that cover you fabbed is beautiful. I'd like to see some more detailed pics of it and also the method of attaching your platform.
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