Re: Backflow preventer instead of air gap
pwood is correct about the grey thingy being a flow control fitting.
This arrangement is the result of incompatible requirements (the white p-trap is a result of incompetence). Section 802.1 requires an indirect waste. As pointed out above, the waste from the sink needs to be a straight shot from the sink outlet to an indirect waste receptor (floor sink). No p-trap is needed or desirable in this pipe. The waste from the indirect drain receptor then needs to go through a grease catcher (I am not using the terms "grease interceptor" or "grease trap" on purpose).
The only "grease catcher" recognized by the IPC is a grease interceptor in accordance with the standards listed in 1003.3.4, which is what is show in the picture. The problem is that those grease traps are really designed to be directly connected to a sink. They rely on the head of the depth of the sink bowl and the tailpeice of the sink to get the proper flow through the interceptor. See these typical
Installation Instructions. The problem is that to accept the waste from the floor sink, the grease trap needs to be below the bottom of the floor sink.
In every AHJ I have dealt with, the health department does not allow the "grease catcher" to be serviced inside the food preparation area, and so it must be located away from it's associated fixture. The extra length of pipe and the minimal head available make a code compliant grease interceptor that meets the manufacturer's installation instructions almost impossible to install. Fortunately, these AHJs also conviently ignore 1003.3.4 and allow the large, outdoor inground, precast concrete type of grease
traps. Thus, the conflict of how to install a grease interceptor after a floor sink never comes up.
This arrangement will work great at catching grease because the grease interceptor is installed the way the manufacturer intended. One might make the argument that the intent of the IPC is to make sure that sewer gasses and back-ups from the building can not possibly get into the food prep sink, and that the pictured arrangment takes care of that. However, the floor sink will now get the nasty effluent splashing in from the interceptor, and the food prep sink is directly connected to the nasty interceptor.