Flanged joints were originally applied, even hundreds of years ago and since, predominantly in quite stiff and strong metallic piping systems. While not always advertised, and particularly with some modern special sealing gaskets, such metal pipe connections are capable of handling substantial tensile and even bending moment loads, even though there are typically some relatively high and localized stresses in flanged connections due to the radial off-set or eccentricity between the bolt circle consisting of normally steel bolts tensile loaded in assembly and the inner gasket area and pipe barrel (that is subsequently stretched and bent etc. by all manner of service loadings).
Flanged joints in plastic piping systems are obviously inherently weaker connections, more subject to viscoelastic deformations, and additionally plastic piping systems are subsequently subjected after original installation to much more pronounced thermal, Bourdon, and Poisson etc. effects (that can also in various fashions also load, and/or repetitively load flanged joints). As you are apparently in this case dealing with underground systems, I guess we could throw in imperfect axial support and/or differential settlement as well as any present corrosive or environmental stress cracking agents also into the mix.
I guess these technical realities, along with some third-party accounts I’ve heard over the years of unexpected or preferential problems in the field with at least some flavors of polyethylene flanged joint connections (I suspect you could readily find more, even published, with a key word web search e.g.
), leads me to believe flanged joints in general could well be further points of vulnerability in plastic pipe systems. It thus may be advisable to work very closely with a trustworthy supplier and installer, with proven experience for such large connections.