So my stove is a catalytic stove and doesn't have a reburn tube.
I looked in my rebuild manual for some information that may also help you. Alot of the gaskets for the stove ( front, back left/right sides and bottom ) are adhesive gaskets, this is direct from the manual. Id go this route as it will make installation easier. The front manifold as well as the left and right air manifolds are all gasket with a rutland cement.. photo below. Im using a small tube as I am not doing a full rebuild and I am not fully disassembling this stove.
Iv looked at the gaskets .. from the ones I can see.. and the gaskets look ok. The gaskets that look to be in trouble are the ones that are around the hottest areas which are the refractory engine, fireback, damper housing. All that listed will get new gaskets along with the top of the stove only because I tool it off.
Im also doing the griddle gasket and the door gaskets. the glas gaskets are getting 700 degree high temp silicone and the doors are the rutland cement with new gaskets
The stove was cleaned with a brush and shopvac. All the parts were removed, brought outside and cleaned with a wire brush, wire wheel on the inside stove parts and blown clean with my air compressor. The outside stove parts were cleaned with scotch cloth and blown clean and wiped down, then painted with a rutland 1200 degree flat paint.
The old cement is removed in the gasket channels by using, my dreme, wire brush and a flat head screwdriver, then blown clean
The glass was removed soaked in warm soapy water, soaked in vinegar, wiped clean and reinstalled in the clean painted doors
