Providing specialized high-capacity vacuum services and full regulatory compliance for commercial kitchens across Gibson, AR.
A grease interceptor is not a large grease trap. It's a different category of system entirely.
Grease interceptors β the large, often in-ground systems that serve high-volume commercial kitchens, food processing operations, and multi-tenant food service facilities β require dedicated equipment, a different service approach, and a more rigorous compliance framework than standard grease traps. Most general service providers are underequipped for them. Most operators don't realize this until something goes wrong.
Grease Trap Portable runs high-capacity vacuum trucks specifically built for interceptor pumping across Gibson, AR. We service everything from 500-gallon above-ground units to large in-ground systems, and we produce the compliance documentation that pretreatment programs in Gibson require.
Scale is the obvious difference. A standard grease trap holds 20β100 gallons. A grease interceptor holds 500, 750, 1,000, or 1,500 gallons β sometimes more. Extracting that volume requires a different truck, a different mobilization plan, and a different service timeline.
But volume isn't the only difference. Interceptors typically serve facilities under active municipal pretreatment oversight. The documentation requirements are stricter, the inspection frequency is higher, and the consequences of a missed service or an incomplete record are more immediate than they are for a small kitchen trap.
Grease Trap Portable understands both sides of that equation. The equipment side and the regulatory side.
High-volume systems fill faster than most operators plan for. We build pumping schedules based on measured fill rates β not estimated ones.
Pumping removes the contents. Cleaning addresses the system's interior condition β walls, baffles, inlet and outlet connections.
Every Grease Trap Portable interceptor service generates a complete service record formatted for pretreatment compliance.
When an interceptor fills ahead of schedule due to an unexpected spike, we mobilize on short notice.
Straightforward, by design. You get a defined schedule, a service confirmation before each visit, a full report after each visit, and a point of contact who knows your system's history. There's no chasing paperwork, no wondering if the truck came, no scrambling to produce records before an inspection.
For facilities with multiple interceptors or multiple tenant units in Gibson, we consolidate everything β one provider, one documentation format, one quarterly summary per site. The coordination overhead is ours, not yours.
We also communicate about problems when we find them β on-site, not in a follow-up proposal. If a baffle is failing, a lid seal is degraded, or the system is showing signs of structural wear, you hear about it during the visit. That's how it should work.
What doesn't get mentioned in a standard pump-out invoice:
Operators in Gibson often manage their interceptor service by a simple rule: call when it's full. The problem is that a grease interceptor is never actually "full" in the way an empty tank becomes full with water.
An interceptor works by maintaining three distinct layers: a floating FOG layer at the top, a clear effluent zone in the middle, and a settled sludge layer at the bottom. The interceptor stops working β meaning FOG starts passing through untreated β not when all three layers fill the tank, but when the FOG and sludge layers grow large enough to eliminate the clear zone entirely.
Regulatory standards typically trigger a pumping requirement when the combined FOG and sludge depth reaches 25% of the interceptor's total liquid depth. For a 1,000-gallon interceptor, that's 250 gallons of accumulated material. At a high-volume kitchen generating 30β50 gallons of FOG per day, you're looking at a 5β8 day service interval β not monthly.
The actionable takeaway: stop using rated capacity as your service trigger. Use measured fill rate. Grease Trap Portable measures fill depth at every service visit and calculates your actual daily accumulation rate. That's the difference between a pumping program and a pumping calendar.
What sizes of grease interceptors does Grease Trap Portable service in Gibson, AR?
We service interceptors from 500 gallons through large commercial systems of 1,500 gallons and above. Our vacuum truck fleet is equipped for high-capacity extraction without requiring multiple mobilizations in most cases.
How is grease interceptor pumping different from standard grease trap pumping?
Volume, equipment, and regulatory requirements. Interceptors hold significantly more waste than standard under-sink or above-ground traps, require heavier extraction equipment, and typically operate under stricter municipal pretreatment compliance requirements in Gibson.
How do you determine the right service interval for an interceptor?
We measure fill rate over the first two to three service visits and calculate your facility's actual daily FOG accumulation. From that, we build an interval that keeps your system within the regulatory 25% threshold.
Can you service an interceptor outside of normal business hours?
Yes. Grease Trap Portable schedules interceptor service to minimize operational disruption β including early morning, late evening, and weekend appointments for facilities in Gibson.
What happens if the interceptor needs a repair, not just pumping?
We identify and document repair needs during the service visit and communicate them to you directly. Minor component repairs β baffles, lid seals β can often be addressed at the time of service.
A 1,000-gallon in-ground interceptor is not a problem for a standard grease trap provider. It's a job for equipment, expertise, and a compliance framework built for high-volume commercial systems. Grease Trap Portable brings all three to every interceptor job across Gibson, AR.
Contact Grease Trap Portable to schedule an interceptor assessment or establish a pumping program for your Gibson facility.