Standard Documents
IEC 61850 consists of the following parts detailed in separate IEC 61850 standard documents
- IEC 61850-1: Introduction and overview
- IEC 61850-2: Glossary
- IEC 61850-3: General requirements
- IEC 61850-4: System and project management - Ed.2
- IEC 61850-5: Communication requirements for functions and device models
- IEC 61850-6: Configuration language for communication in electrical substations related to IEDs - Ed.2
- IEC 61850-7: Basic communication structure for substation and feeder equipment
- IEC 61850-7-1: Principles and models - Ed.2
- IEC 61850-7-2: Abstract communication service interface (ACSI) - Ed.2
- IEC 61850-7-3: Common Data Classes - Ed.2
- IEC 61850-7-4: Compatible logical node classes and data classes - Ed.2
- IEC 61850-7-10: Communication networks and systems in power utility automation - Requirements for web-based and structured access to the IEC 61850 information models
- IEC 61850-8: Specific communication service mapping (SCSM)
- IEC 61850-8-1: Mappings to MMS (ISO/IEC9506-1 and ISO/IEC 9506-2) - Ed.2
- IEC 61850-9: Specific communication service mapping (SCSM)
- IEC 61850-9-1: Sampled values over serial unidirectional multidrop point to point link
- IEC 61850-9-2: Sampled values over ISO/IEC 8802-3 - Ed.2
- IEC 61850-10-: Conformance testing
Read more about this topic: IEC 61850
Famous quotes containing the words standard and/or documents:
“If the Revolution has the right to destroy bridges and art monuments whenever necessary, it will stop still less from laying its hand on any tendency in art which, no matter how great its achievement in form, threatens to disintegrate the revolutionary environment or to arouse the internal forces of the Revolution, that is, the proletariat, the peasantry and the intelligentsia, to a hostile opposition to one another. Our standard is, clearly, political, imperative and intolerant.”
—Leon Trotsky (18791940)
“In the course of writing one historical book or another, it has happened that I could hardly restrain myself from simply copying entire documents. Indeed, I sometimes sank down among the documents and said to myself, I cant improve on these.”
—Alfred Döblin (18781957)