Specialty Plumbing Systems
Grease traps, floor drains, trap primers, dielectric unions, and water hammer arrestors.
- Explain grease trap function, sizing, and maintenance requirements
- Describe floor drain trap primers and why they are required
- Identify water hammer causes and describe arrestor installation
Lesson 1
Grease Traps & Floor Drain Trap Primers
Grease Traps (Grease Interceptors)
A grease trap (grease interceptor) is required on drainage from commercial kitchen fixtures to prevent fats, oils, and grease (FOG) from entering the municipal sewer system. Grease solidifies in pipes and causes blockages.
How Grease Traps Work
Grease traps use a simple principle - grease is lighter than water and floats. Wastewater enters the trap, slows down, and grease rises to the surface where it is retained. Cleaner water exits from the bottom of the trap to the sewer.
- Under-counter traps - small units for individual fixtures
- In-ground interceptors - large units for entire commercial kitchens
- Sizing is based on fixture drainage flow rates
- Regular pumping is required to prevent trap capacity from being exceeded
Floor Drain Trap Primers
Floor drains in commercial and institutional buildings often go weeks or months without receiving water flow. Without regular flow, the trap seal evaporates and sewer gas enters the building. A trap primer automatically adds water to maintain the seal.
Trap Primer Types
Pressure-activated - triggers when supply line is used
Electronic - timer-based water delivery
Passive (trap seal primer) - uses fixture waste flow
Where Required
Commercial floor drains
Mechanical rooms
Any floor drain not receiving regular flow
Emergency drains in mechanical spaces
Exam Tip
When the exam asks why sewer gas enters through a floor drain, the answer is evaporated trap seal. The solution is a trap primer to maintain the water seal.
Grease traps intercept FOG from commercial kitchen drainage by allowing grease to float and be retained. Trap primers maintain water seals in floor drains that do not receive regular flow, preventing sewer gas entry from evaporated trap seals.