Heeding the exhortations of our cult leader, aka. @BKVP
to pay attention to the door and window gaskets:
Air leaking around the door gasket is room temperature. When that room air, say 75F hits the surface of combustor, which might be well over 1,000F, the result is thermal shock to both substrate and wash coat (which binds precious metals to substrate).
... and noting the deterioration of the window gasket from the last time an unfortunate bird fell down my chimney (before I installed a screened flue cap), and that the door gasket fails the dollar-bill test on the hinge side (where tightening the latch won't help), I'm replacing both gaskets.
So I wonder how to handle the corners:
1. Cut the gasket into 4 pieces making butt joints at the corners ?
2. Cut the gasket into 4 pieces making miter joints at the corners ?
3. Keep the gasket in one piece and make little triangular "relief" cuts at the corners ?
4. Keep the gasket in one piece and just fudge the corners ?
I imagine the correct answer might be different for the two gaskets.

Air leaking around the door gasket is room temperature. When that room air, say 75F hits the surface of combustor, which might be well over 1,000F, the result is thermal shock to both substrate and wash coat (which binds precious metals to substrate).
... and noting the deterioration of the window gasket from the last time an unfortunate bird fell down my chimney (before I installed a screened flue cap), and that the door gasket fails the dollar-bill test on the hinge side (where tightening the latch won't help), I'm replacing both gaskets.
So I wonder how to handle the corners:
1. Cut the gasket into 4 pieces making butt joints at the corners ?
2. Cut the gasket into 4 pieces making miter joints at the corners ?
3. Keep the gasket in one piece and make little triangular "relief" cuts at the corners ?
4. Keep the gasket in one piece and just fudge the corners ?
I imagine the correct answer might be different for the two gaskets.
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