This standard sets forth the requirements for power transformer application. This standard is intended to be used as a basis for performance, interchangeability, and safety of the equipment covered and to assist in the proper selection of such equipment. This document is a product standard that covers certain electrical, dimensional, and mechanical characteristics of 50 Hz and 60 Hz, liquid-immersed power transformers and autotransformers. Such power transformers may be remotely or integrally associated with either primary switchgear or substations, or both, for step-down or step-up purposes and base rated as follows: 833 kVA and above single-phase, 750 kVA and above three-phase. This standard applies to all liquid-immersed power transformers and autotransformers that do not belong to the following types of apparatus: instrument transformers, step voltage and induction voltage regulators, arc-furnace transformers, rectifier transformers, specialty transformers, grounding transformers, mobile transformers, and mine transformers.
- Standard Committee
- PE/TR - Transformers
- Status
- Superseded Standard
- PAR Approval
- 2009-09-11
- Superseded by
- C57.12.10-2017
- Superseding
- C57.12.10-1997
- Corrigenda
-
C57.12.10-2010/Cor 1-2012
C57.12.10-2010/Cor 2-2013
- Board Approval
- 2010-09-30
- History
-
- ANSI Approved:
- 2011-08-04
- Published:
- 2011-01-06
Additional Resources
- Erratas
- C57.12.10-2010_errata.pdf
Working Group Details
- Society
- IEEE Power and Energy Society
- Standard Committee
- PE/TR - Transformers
- Working Group
-
WGC57.12.10 - Power Transformers - Req. for Liq. Imm. Power Xfrmrs Working Group
- IEEE Program Manager
- Patrycja Jarosz
Contact Patrycja Jarosz - Working Group Chair
- Scott Digby
Other Activities From This Working Group
Current projects that have been authorized by the IEEE SA Standards Board to develop a standard.
No Active Projects
Standards approved by the IEEE SA Standards Board that are within the 10-year lifecycle.
C57.12.10-2017
IEEE Standard Requirements for Liquid-Immersed Power Transformers
This voluntary consensus standard sets forth the requirements for power transformer application. This standard is intended to be used as a basis for performance, interchangeability, and safety of the equipment covered, and to assist in the proper selection of such equipment. This document is a product standard that covers certain electrical, dimensional, and mechanical characteristics of 50 Hz and 60 Hz, liquid-immersed power transformers and autotransformers. Such power transformers may be remotely or integrally associated with either primary switchgear or substations, or both, for step-down or step-up purposes and base rated as follows: 833 kVA and above single-phase, 750 kVA and above three-phase.This standard applies to all liquid-immersed power transformers and autotransformers that do not belong to the following types of apparatus: instrument transformers, step voltage and induction voltage regulators, arc-furnace transformers, rectifier transformers, specialty transformers, grounding transformers, mobile transformers, and mine transformers.
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.
C57.12.10-1997
American National Standard for Transformers-230 kV and Below 833 / 958 through 8333 / 10 417 kVA, Single-Phase, and 750 / 862 through 60 000 / 80 000 / 100 000 kVA, Three-Phase Without Load Tap Changing; and 3750 / 4687 through 60 000 / 80 000 / 100 000 kVA with Load Tap Changing-Safety Requirement
This standard covers certain electrical, dimensional, and mechanical characteristics and takes into consideration certain safety features of 60-Hz, two-winding, liquid-immersed transformers rated as follows, and used for step-down or step-up purposes: a) 833/958 through 8333/10 417 kVA, single-phase; 750/862 through 10 000/12 500 kVA, three-phase; high voltage, 2400 through 138 000 volts; low-voltage, 480 through 36 230 volts–without load tap changing; b) 12 000/16 000/20 000 through 60 000/80 000/100 000 kVA, three-phase; high voltage, 23 000 through 230 000 volts; low voltage, 4800 through 36 230 volts–without load tap changing; c) 3750/4687 through 10 000/12 500 kVA, three-phase; high voltage, 6900 through 138 000; low voltage, 2400 through 36 230 volts–with load tap changing; d) 12 000/16 000/20 000 through 60 000/80 000/100 000 kVA, three-phase; high voltage, 23 000 through 230 000 volts; low voltage, 4800 through 36 230 volts–with load tap changing. It is not intended that this standard apply to dry-type, regulating, pad-mounted, secondary-network, furnace, rectifier, or mine transformers.
C57.12.10-2010/Cor 1-2012
IEEE Standard Requirements for Liquid-Immersed Power Transformers--Corrigendum 1: Correction of 5.1.9--Sudden Pressure Relay
Technical corrections to 5.1.9 of IEEE Std C57.12.10 are discussed in this corrigendum.
C57.12.10-2010/Cor 2-2013
IEEE Standard Requirements for Liquid-Immersed Power Transformers -- Corrigendum 2: Correction of A.3.2.13 Autotransformer LTC application considerations
Requirements for power transformer application are set forth in this standard. It is intended to be used as a basis for performance, interchangeability, and safety of the equipment covered and to assist in the proper selection of such equipment. This document is a product standard that covers certain electrical, dimensional, and mechanical characteristics of 50 Hz and 60 Hz, liquid-immersed power transformers and autotransformers. Such power transformers may be remotely or integrally associated with either primary switchgear or substations, or both, for step-down or step-up purposes and base rated as follows: 833 kVA and above single-phase, 750 kVA and above three-phase. This standard applies to all liquid-immersed power transformers and autotransformers that do not belong to the following types of apparatus: instrument transformers, step voltage and induction voltage regulators, arc-furnace transformers, rectifier transformers, specialty transformers, grounding transformers, mobile transformers, and mine transformers.
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