Active Standard

IEEE 1159.3-2019/Cor 1-2024

IEEE Recommended Practice for Power Quality Data Interchange Format (PQDIF) - Corrigendum 1

IEEE Std 1159.3™-2019 specifies the Power Quality Data Interchange Format (PQDIF), which is a file format suitable for exchanging power quality related measurement and simulation data in a vendor-independent manner. Two critical “tags” to Table B.6 that were recommended in IEEE Std 1159.3-2003 but removed in IEEE Std 1159.3-2019: tagChannelDefnIdx and tagChannelGroupID are reinstated in this corrigendum.

Standard Committee
PE/T&D - Transmission and Distribution
Status
Active Standard
PAR Approval
2023-02-15
Board Approval
2024-02-15
History
Published:
2024-04-12

Working Group Details

Society
IEEE Power and Energy Society
Standard Committee
PE/T&D - Transmission and Distribution
Working Group
1159.3_WG - WG for Power Quality Data Interchange Format (PQDIF)
IEEE Program Manager
Christian Orlando
Contact Christian Orlando
Working Group Chair
Daniel Sabin

Other Activities From This Working Group

Current projects that have been authorized by the IEEE SA Standards Board to develop a standard.


P1159.3
Recommended Practice for Power Quality Data Interchange Format (PQDIF)

A file format suitable for exchanging power quality related measurement and simulation data in a vendor independent manner is defined in this recommended practice. The format is designed to represent all power quality phenomena identified in IEEE Std 1159-2009, IEEE Recommended Practice on Monitoring Electric Power Quality, other power related measurement data, and is extensible to other data types as well. The recommended file format utilizes a highly compressed storage scheme to help reduce disk space and transmission times. The utilization of Globally Unique Identifiers (GUID) to represent each element in the file permits the format to be extensible without the need for a central registration authority

Learn More About P1159.3

Standards approved by the IEEE SA Standards Board that are within the 10-year lifecycle.


1159.3-2019
IEEE Recommended Practice for Power Quality Data Interchange Format (PQDIF)

A file format suitable for exchanging power quality related measurement and simulation data in a vendor independent manner is defined in this recommended practice. The format is designed to represent all power quality phenomena identified in IEEE Std 1159-2009, IEEE Recommended Practice on Monitoring Electric Power Quality, other power related measurement data, and is extensible to other data types as well. The recommended file format utilizes a highly compressed storage scheme to help reduce disk space and transmission times. The utilization of Globally Unique Identifiers (GUID) to represent each element in the file permits the format to be extensible without the need for a central registration authority.

Learn More About 1159.3-2019

These standards have been replaced with a revised version of the standard, or by a compilation of the original active standard and all its existing amendments, corrigenda, and errata.


1159.3-2003
IEEE Recommended Practice for the Transfer of Power Quality Data

This recommended practice defines a file format suitable for exchanging power quality related measurement and simulation data in a vendor independent manner. The format is designed to represent all power quality phenomena identified in IEEE Std 1159 TM -1995, IEEE Recommended Practice on Monitoring Electric Power Quality, other power related measurement data, and is extensible to other data types as well. The recommended file format utilizes a highly compressed storage scheme to minimize disk space and transmission times. The utilization of globally unique identifiers (GUID) to represent each element in the file permits the format to be extensible without the need for a central registration authority.

Learn More About 1159.3-2003

These standards have been removed from active status through a ballot where the standard is made inactive as a consensus decision of a balloting group.


No Inactive-Withdrawn Standards

These standards are removed from active status through an administrative process for standards that have not undergone a revision process within 10 years.


No Inactive-Reserved Standards
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