Ieee C57.125
Ieee C57.125
Sponsored by the
Transformers Committee
IEEE
3 Park Avenue IEEE Std C57.125™-2015
New York, NY 10016-5997 (Revision of
USA IEEE Std C57.125-1991)
IEEE Std C57.125™-2015
(Revision of
IEEE Std C57.125-1991)
Sponsor
Transformers Committee
of the
IEEE Power and Energy Society
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Participants
At the time this IEEE guide was completed, the PC57.125 Revision of Guide for Failure Investigation,
Documentation, Analysis and Reporting for Power Transformers and Shunt Reactors Working Group had
the following membership:
The following members of the individual balloting committee voted on this guide. Balloters may have
voted for approval, disapproval, or abstention.
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Copyright © 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.
Ryan Niemerg Oleg Roizman Craig Stiegemeier
Joe Nims Thomas Rozek Michael Swearingen
Lorraine Padden Dinesh Sankarakurup Charles Sweetser
Klaus Papp Daniel Sauer David Tepen
Bansi Patel Bartien Sayogo James Thompson
Paulette Payne Powell Ewald Schweiger John Vergis
Brian Penny Adam Sewell Jane Ann Verner
Branimir Petosic Jeremy Sewell Loren Wagenaar
Donald Platts Nikunj Shah David Wallach
Alvaro Portillo Hamid Sharifnia John Wang
Iulian Profir Devki Sharma Joe Watson
Leslie Recksiedler Hyeong Jin Sim Kenneth White
Jean-Christophe Riboud Kenneth Skinger Jennifer Yu
John Roach Jerry Smith Kipp Yule
Diego Robalino Sanjib Som Luis Zambrano
Michael Roberts Brian Sparling James Ziebarth
Charles Rogers Thomas Spitzer Waldemar Ziomek
When the IEEE-SA Standards Board approved this guide on 3 September 2015, it had the following
membership:
*Member Emeritus
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Copyright © 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.
Introduction
This introduction is not part of IEEE Std C57.125™-2015, IEEE Guide for Failure Investigation, Documentation,
Analysis, and Reporting for Power Transformers and Shunt Reactors.
When IEEE Std C57.117™ was developed, there was both a need for failure reporting and a means to
collect the data. While the reporting was being developed, it became clear that a consistent and uniform
method of analyzing failures was also needed. Thus was born the failure analysis and reporting group
of documents. The resulting documents became known as IEEE Std C57.117-1986 and IEEE Std
C57.125™-1991.
Unfortunately, an outcome of competition in the utility industry was a perception that such data would be
proprietary and so the means to share the data disappeared. Although the means to share the information
disappeared, the need remains. However, the population must now be limited to those assets controlled by
an individual entity. In the next iteration, perhaps a single trustworthy entity will emerge to whom the data
can be reported and useful reports can thus be generated.
The current version of IEEE Std C57.125 combines the methodology of failure analysis with the data
collection methodology and contains forms and methods to collect data in a consistent manner, if only at a
sub-set of the larger population.
The analysis of failures is still an important aspect of asset management, if for no other reason than to
improve the ability to identify and eliminate the root cause of the failure and prevent its recurrence. By
applying the Scientific Method in its most straightforward form, we hope to provide the guidance necessary
to achieve consistency in reporting and correcting root causes as they appear in the industry.
In addition, this update to IEEE Std C57.125 has adopted the most current (and approved by IEEE-SA)
safety methods taken directly from IEEE Std C57.152™. 1 Where these methods may conflict with local
practices by individual utilities, the local practices should be those to which the safety practice adheres.
There is the hope in the industry that a guide will be developed that will allow users to reach an
unequivocal conclusion as to the root cause of the failure. This is, unfortunately, not yet achievable.
Once statistics are available this may become more likely. However, the user must realize that the
high level of energy available from the power system may destroy the evidence of root cause. Any
complex system will provide multiple possible outcomes to a single event, and the event of a major
failure is, in reality, multiple events, the sequence of which may not be readily determined.
1
Information on references can be found in Clause 2.
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Copyright © 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.
Contents
1. Overview ...................................................................................................................................................10
1.1 Scope ..................................................................................................................................................10
1.2 Purpose ...............................................................................................................................................10
2. Normative references.................................................................................................................................11
3. Definitions .................................................................................................................................................11
6. Analysis .....................................................................................................................................................35
6.1 General ...............................................................................................................................................35
6.2 Analysis of mechanical failure of windings........................................................................................36
6.3 Analysis of electrical failure ...............................................................................................................38
6.4 Analysis of other electrical failures ....................................................................................................42
7. Data Base...................................................................................................................................................43
7.1 General ...............................................................................................................................................43
7.2 Guiding principles ..............................................................................................................................43
7.3 Establishing a data base ......................................................................................................................44
7.4 Failure Reports ...................................................................................................................................48
7.5 Data base outputs ................................................................................................................................50
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Copyright © 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.
IEEE Guide for Failure Investigation,
Documentation, Analysis, and
Reporting for Power Transformers and
Shunt Reactors
IMPORTANT NOTICE: IEEE Standards documents are not intended to ensure safety, security, health,
or environmental protection, or ensure against interference with or from other devices or networks.
Implementers of IEEE Standards documents are responsible for determining and complying with all
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applicable laws and regulations.
This IEEE document is made available for use subject to important notices and legal disclaimers.
These notices and disclaimers appear in all publications containing this document and may
be found under the heading “Important Notice” or “Important Notices and Disclaimers
Concerning IEEE Documents.” They can also be obtained on request from IEEE or viewed at
http://standards.ieee.org/IPR/disclaimers.html.
1. Overview
1.1 Scope
This guide recommends a procedure to be used to perform and document a failure analysis and the
reporting and statistical analysis of reliability of power transformers and shunt reactors used on electric
power systems.
1.2 Purpose
This document is intended to provide a methodology by which the most probable cause of any particular
transformer failure may be determined by applying the scientific method to investigations; provide
sufficient guidelines, examples, and case histories to promote uniformity in the analysis of transformer
failures; encourage the establishment of routine and uniform data collection so that valuable facts are not
lost or destroyed; encourage consistency of nomenclature and compatibility with similar efforts by other
organizations (Examples include but not limited to CIGRE, EEI, IEC, NEMA, NERC, and AEIC); and
encourage cooperative efforts by users and manufacturers during the failure analysis.
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Copyright © 2015 IEEE. All rights reserved.