Rusty's Grease Service delivers professional vacuum truck extraction, thorough inspection, baffle service, and full compliance documentation for commercial grease interceptors across Prosperity, WV.
Click Here to Call (888) 435-1815A grease interceptor is a different animal than a standard kitchen grease trap. Larger capacity, higher output load, exterior installation, and stricter compliance requirements.
Rusty's Grease Service handles grease interceptor pumping across Prosperity, WV with the correct equipment, thorough extraction of all three waste layers, proper inspection, and documentation that holds up under regulatory review.
We assess your interceptorβs capacity against your actual daily kitchen output and set a service interval that keeps the system operating safely.
We extract all three waste layers β floating FOG, suspended solids, and settled sludge β to the full depth of the system using properly sized vacuum trucks.
Full assessment of fill level, flow, baffles, and seals before and after service, with complete documentation issued on-site.
Full-service restaurants with heavy fry operations need calibrated schedules based on actual output, not generic averages.
Food courts, hotels, and mixed-use buildings with shared interceptors. We manage tenant coordination and consolidated compliance reporting.
Schools, hospitals, stadiums, and catering facilities with variable volume. We build flexible programs that handle peak periods.
New operators inheriting undocumented or poorly maintained interceptors receive thorough corrective pump-out and condition assessment.
The first call is short and direct. We assess your interceptor size, kitchen operations, and current status, then recommend a proper program.
On service days, our team arrives in the confirmed window, completes full extraction and inspection, leaves the site clean, and issues your service report before departing.
Pricing is confirmed upfront. We schedule around your operation β interceptor access is typically external and does not require kitchen shutdown.
Flow Restriction & Compliance Risk: An interceptor nearing 80% capacity allows more FOG to bypass into the sewer β exactly what enforcement programs target.
Sizing Issues: Kitchen output growth gradually outpaces the original interceptor design, leading to faster fill rates and capacity failures.
Poor Documentation: Even a well-maintained interceptor without proper records carries compliance risk during inspections.
Most municipalities require commercial grease interceptors to be pumped before they reach 25% capacity by combined FOG and solids. This is the point where separation efficiency begins to degrade significantly.
A high-volume restaurant can produce 50β100 gallons of FOG daily. That means many 1,000-gallon interceptors need service every 5β8 weeks β not quarterly β to stay compliant.
Rusty's documents the pre-service fill level on every visit so you always know whether your current interval is working or needs adjustment.
"I manage a commercial building with four restaurant tenants sharing one interceptor. Rusty's handles all of it β scheduling, tenant coordination, consolidated reporting. I can pull the compliance records for any inspection without chasing anyone down."
"Our interceptor was on a standard quarterly schedule that clearly wasn't keeping up with our event volume. Rusty's moved us to six-week service with supplemental visits around our big events. We haven't had a capacity issue since."
"The pre-service fill level in the service report changed how I think about interceptor management. I can see the trend over time and it's obvious now that our previous schedule was consistently running us too close to the threshold."
If your commercial interceptor in Prosperity is overdue, operating without current documentation, or handling output that has grown beyond the current schedule β Rusty's Grease Service is ready to take a look.
Straight talk, proper equipment, and service that actually matches the system.
Click Here to Call (888) 435-1815Call Rusty's or request an assessment for your interceptor in Prosperity, WV.