Discuss Tiger Loop overflow problems in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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I find in 9 out of 10 installs with a tiger loop don't need them. An instant sign of somebody not knowing what they are doing.
 
Does the burner require the grub screw when connecting the return oil hose to the tigerloop as Reillo do? Also it might be worth finding out the pump pressure.
 
I agree the guy put the deaerator in because when he put the replacement pump in last year there was a blank hole he had to plug. So a year later he realized that he put the plug in not threaded correctly which was bringing vacuum into the system. In between he add the deaerator cause he thinks this will help not knowing what he did with the pump. He fixed the plug but now the AFRISCO 3/k-1 which does not have the double chamber fills to the top and may over flow out the nipple. The nipple releases the air. Maybe I got a bad deaerator. This was older model but only two years old. Any thoughts. Yes I realize he put the deaerator in because of his screw up and likely I did not need it. But at this point it is installed and I just cut the oil supply off to bring oil level back down to half full on the deaerator. Do I have a bad dearator? Any ideas.
 
I agree, looks like you don't have a bad Tigerloop, but you probably have a faulty engineer. Try replacing the engineer with a new one and hopefully that will sort it. :)
 
Not trying to hijack the thread but I have a tiger loop question. Am having a new tank fitted next week. When the guys came to survey the situation I asked about putting in a new tiger loop as the current one looks naff to say the least. The filter holder is rusty and the glass dome looks coloured. They said do not bother just replace the filter and if I felt it needed it paint the filter holder. Cannot do either until after they have been as current tank has no isolation tap on it between tank and tiger loop.
 
@Dave J I would probably go with the Tigerloop at fault, I replaced a boiler which was working fine in that aspect (water jacket failed), but when I replaced the boiler the Tigerloop pi**ed out oil everywhere. Replaced and all was fine. however, by the sounds of it, you don't actually need one anyway.
@Bogart for the sake of £40 I would replace the Tigerloop, if the filter bowl underneath is manky I would replace, if it is the bracket holding it too the wall then I wouldn't bother. But make sure the filter is clean inside whilst the oil is off.
 
Tigerloops cost more than £40 if you are installing them inside a building as you need internal Bio Tigerloop. It has the metal top with threads for vent to take a pipe to outside
 
My bad, I didn't read the bit that said inside lol, can get the internal one, but depending on what this basement is like and if you can get a pipe out you may have to go with a GOK one which are pretty good.
I wonder what he did in the end?!?
 
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