A couple comments here.
Firstly, adding gelatin to the keg will clear the beer, but only if you
don't move the keg. Once you move the keg, you disturb the sediment at the bottom and it mixes back up into suspension. If you want/need to move the keg, and you want the beer to be clear, then you have to rack it to another keg
after letting the gelatin clear it.
Secondly, unfortunately, yes gelatin does indeed strip away hop flavour and aroma. If you're making a big, hoppy beer, and you want clarity, then you need to cold crash and add gelatin
before adding the dry hops. Ideally, you would rack the beer to another vessel after clearing it with gelatin, but before adding the dry hops. Yes, this will impart some "hop haze" to the beer and it won't be perfectly clear, but that's to style for IPAs/Double IPAs, and it's a necessary aspect of a really hoppy beer.
Thirdly, the IBU level has nothing to do with hoppiness. IBU is a measure of bitterness, not hoppiness. Dry hopping adds hop flavour and aroma, but no IBUs (additional bitterness) whatsoever. Gelatin will not strip away bitterness (thus, your IBU level will remain the same), but it
will strip away the hop flavour and aroma imparted by dry hopping.
In short, if you're making a big, hoppy beer to be transported and served on-site, and you want it as clear as possible, then the ideal sequence would be:
- Ferment for 3 weeks
- Cold crash for 2 days
- Add gelatin, leave refrigerated for 3-4 more days
- Carefully rack beer to another fermenter, leaving behind as much sediment as possible
- Allow beer to warm back up to room temperature (since hop oils are more soluble at warmer temperatures)
- Dry hop for 7-10 days
- Cold crash again for 2-3 days
- Rack to a keg, again leaving behind sediment (i.e., pellet hop gunk), begin carbonating
That's as clear as you can get a hoppy beer, without sacrificing hop flavour and aroma by filtering or adding post-dry-hopping gelatin.