IEEE C57.150-2012 pdf free download.IEEE Guide for the Transportation of Transformers and Reactors Rated 1 0 000 kVA or Higher.
2. Normative references The following referenced documents are indispensable for the application of this document (i.e., they must be understood and used, so each referenced document is cited in text and its relationship to this document is explained). For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For undated references, the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments or corrigenda) applies. American Uniform Commercial Code (UCC). 1 International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) 560, INCOTERMS 2010. 2 IEEE Std C57.12.10 TM , IEEE Standard Requirements for Liquid-Immersed Power Transformers. 3, 4 IEEE Std C57.93 TM , IEEE Guide for Installation and Maintenance of Oil-Immersed Power Transformers. IEEE Std C57.149 TM , Guide for Application and Interpretation of Frequency Response Analysis for Oil Immersed Transformers. IEEE Std 62 TM , Guide for Diagnostic Field Testing of Electric Power Apparatus—Part 1: Oil Filled Power Transformers, Regulators, and Reactors. IMO IA292E, Code of Safe Practice for Cargo Stowage and Securing. 5 3. Definitions For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply. The IEEE Standards Dictionary Online should be consulted for terms not defined in this clause. 6 Association of American Railroads (AAR): A society that issues a manual providing guidance on tie downs and bracing for transporting dimensional loads by rail [B5]. 7 ballast: The means of maintaining the balance, stability, and height above the water level of a barge while the load weight is being redistributed due to loading, unloading, or movement of the load. Ballast is also extra mass added to one side of a rail car shipment to bring the center of gravity to the center of the rail car. barge crane: A heavy-lift crane installed on top of a large barge. This type of crane is useful for moving large loads, such as power transformers, from one type of vessel to another over water.
hydraulic jack: A lifting means powered by hydraulic action. Hydraulic jacks may be used singly or with multiple jacks operated in parallel to lift the load. idler cars: Empty rail cars in front and behind the rail car being used to carry a particular load, acting to add stability, to distribute the weight of the locomotive(s) and heavy rail cars more evenly over bridges or lighter track, to provide additional wheels for braking effort, for safety separation from the locomotive, and to better-protect the load as it is transported. impact recorder: A device which records accelerations, g-force in the longitudinal (X-axis), lateral (Y- axis), and vertical (Z-axis) directions. Impact recorders may have pre-set or user-settable threshold magnitude of impact registered, may measure magnitude of impact only, may measure magnitude and duration of the impact (energy) during the impact, and/or may be equipped with a global positioning system (GPS) location system. Syn: shock recorder. Incoterms®: Incoterms rules or International Commercial terms are a series of pre-defined commercial terms published by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) widely used in international commercial transactions. International Maritime Organization (IMO): United Nations agency concerned with safe, secure, and efficient shipping on clean oceans. jack and slide procedure: A procedure using hydraulic jacks and cribbing materials to raise or lower a load onto a set of beams or rails on which the load is then pulled via the pulling facilities or pulled/pushed by hydraulic rams to slide or roll the load along the beams in order to locate the load in its final position. Syn: jack and roll; jack and glide. jacking facilities: Reinforced portions of equipment tanks that are designated as points where the equipment can be lifted safely by hydraulic jacks (refer to IEEE Std C57.12.10).
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