My pellet stove door gasket leaked right from the start. There is some sort of sleeve where the ends meet and it leaks right there.What is the expected lifespan of a wood-burning stove door gasket?
You can probably fix that with some minor ingenuity and some high heat silicone. Drolet splices their gasket at the bottom door centre, which becomes a tiny leak. This can easily be rectified with a wee bit of silicone covered by a wee piece of aluminum foil or aluminum duct tape over that joint. I actually prefer the foil, as it is more malleable and more leak proof. I have a tiny, tiny leak right now with the tape, which I didn't have with the foil. I replaced it last fall for no reason whatsoever, other than the tape is more robust. The key is to make the silicone and foil just a tiny bit proud of the door gasket, like about a mm or so. It will squish down when you close the door to cure the repair. The foil is only there to prevent the silicone from sticking to the door while curing. I just dreamt this up, but it works well in the case of my stoves.My pellet stove door gasket leaked right from the start. There is some sort of sleeve where the ends meet and it leaks right there.
Thanks I will try that. My only idea (which was not of any help) was to try and "pluck" it to make it proud, but it's like they used some sort of heat shrink and it's hiding all the fibers. I can't expand it.You can probably fix that with some minor ingenuity and some high heat silicone. Drolet splices their gasket at the bottom door centre, which becomes a tiny leak. This can easily be rectified with a wee bit of silicone covered by a wee piece of aluminum foil or aluminum duct tape over that joint. I actually prefer the foil, as it is more malleable and more leak proof. I have a tiny, tiny leak right now with the tape, which I didn't have with the foil. I replaced it last fall for no reason whatsoever, other than the tape is more robust. The key is to make the silicone and foil just a tiny bit proud of the door gasket, like about a mm or so. It will squish down when you close the door to cure the repair. The foil is only there to prevent the silicone from sticking to the door while curing. I just dreamt this up, but it works well in the case of my stoves.
Thanks, bud, I’m trying to get it ordered now. Mine fell off yesterday just alil bit when I was cleaning the stove..With the OEM gasket I get about 3-4 yrs with the 4th year being 'iffy'.
That gasket should seal using the method I described. On the drolet's (my two anyway) the splice is in the bottom centre, so the foil overlay which I wrap from the inside to the underside of the doorframe cannot be seen from the outside unless you are laying underneath the door.Thanks I will try that. My only idea (which was not of any help) was to try and "pluck" it to make it proud, but it's like they used some sort of heat shrink and it's hiding all the fibers. I can't expand it.
Have you tried not closing it to cure? That way you could use the silicon buildout, which will crush when you close the door for burning? I guess you can't take a chance on too much pressure on the glass?
I had the stove shutdown as we were sunny and 20C here today. I took a picture. That was probably a weeks worth or maybe two as I have been only burning about 16 hours a day now.
It might just need a re-glueing in that location if the rest is still holding well. Use a little red RTV if that is the case. Let it set up for 24 hrs.Thanks, bud, I’m trying to get it ordered now. Mine fell off yesterday just alil bit when I was cleaning the stove..
Do you have a link for that ?It might just need a re-glueing in that location if the rest is still holding well. Use a little red RTV if that is the case. Let it set up for 24 hrs.
There are many brands. If you search RTV Silicon Red you can pick it up or order anywhere.Do you have a link for that ?
The local hardware stove probably has some. Permatex makes it.Do you have a link for that ?
Thank youThe local hardware stove probably has some. Permatex makes it.
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