Everything is wired correctly, can hear the relay kick on when power is on but motor will not start
a three section motor has 3 warm leads. this is to declare that the peaks interior the alternating modern are closer together so as that the motor has much less time between each height, as a result runs smoother and greater effectively. a three section motor will generally final longer than a single section. I even have interior the previous used the two forms of section converters - static and rotary. The static converters are a series of capacitors which make up the 0.33 leg while linked to a 220 circuit. those are no longer one hundred% reliable. I saved the electrician's telephone huge style attainable. A rotary converter is, as I comprehend it, a generator which generates the 0.33 section for the motor. those in my adventure are solid and if super adequate, can function better than one motor. i'm neither an electrician nor an engineer yet have had adventure with the two forms of section converters.
I have to make a few assumptions here since additional information is necessary to try and help you. I assume this is a single phase induction motor. Second, based on the first assumption, the motor may be wound with just a simple auxiliary winding to start the motor spinning or it may have one or two capacitors attached to it for improved starting torque and running performance. Third, I assume the motor windings are good. If you the motor humming when you energize it, but it does not spin, you may have an open circuit to the auxiliary winding. Try turning the motor shaft in the direction you want it to spin. Does it spin for you? If yes, the centrifugal switch supplying the auxiliary winding may be bad. Check and replace it if necessary. If your motor has one of more capacitors mounted outside of the motor case, check and replace them as necessary. If your windings are good the motor should work. Hope this helps, Newton1Law
Possibly one of the coils in the motor has burned out... the wire in it will not conduct electrivity