Suggestions:
1. Please, notice that the referenced ANSI/IEEE Standard C37.010-1979 "American National Standard Application Guide for AC High-Voltage Circuit Breakers Rated on a Symmetrical Current Basis."
does not use a word "balanced" or "balanced fault". These words frequently appear in textbooks to elucidate the symmetrical components, simplify their mathematics, disregard Voltage or Current versus Time effects, shorten a paper to be published, to fit normal "six" or so page limit in some society Journals, etc. In practice, there is mostly unbalanced load, somewhat unbalanced power supply voltage source, Voltage or Current versus Time effects, etc.
2. If anyone has any suggestions or opinions that the balanced loads options shall be included in standards and those ungrounded three-phase-to-phase fault be the same (energetically) as the three-phase-to-phase grounded faults, one may wish to contact:
or
with ones suggestions. Who knows, may be the next revision of those standards will reflect them?
3. Incidentally, Referenced ANSI/IEEE Standard C37.010-1979
states "In general, the three-phase ungrounded fault imposes the most severe duty on a circuit breaker, since the first phase to interrupt has a normal-frequency recovery voltage of approximately 87 % of system phase-to-phase voltage. The corresponding value for grounded three-phase fault is 58 % when Xo=X1 and up to 75 % on an effectively grounded system. See IEEE Std 32-1972, Requirements, Terminology, and Test Procedures for Neutral Grounding Devices."