I would suggest the capacitor is a starting capacitor, which is also why you have three leads. You might try mentioning what colour the leads are, someone might know which ones which.
I don't know a great deal about electric motors, but I think that one wire is neutral, one is live, and the third connects to the capacitor. The other end of the capacitor connects to live, it creates a phase shift, which starts the motor moving.
On 230VAC single phase here in the states both are hot legs white and black should be 115vac to ground and 230 to each other the other wire soulds like it goes to the cap wire color would be help full so would type of motor and what ever other info you could give.
On 230VAC single phase here in the states both are hot legs white and black should be 115vac to ground and 230 to each other the other wire soulds like it goes to the cap wire color would be help full so would type of motor and what ever other info you could give.
soow this is all the info i cant get..
(i have the 1,5KW version)
**broken link removed**
IF you read it a bit you will see: Capacitor start motor, FE control box required..
mhh now i read it again and i see that FE means: The use of a Franklin Electric control box offers you maintenance-free long life operation by providing high starting torque and motor protection.
Would it bee an good idea to buy one?? i think we need one..right??
i know read in an pdf that from 1,1Kw - 3,7KW i need Cap Run and Cap start..
any one ideas wich values the 2 have?? in the package came only one cap?
Try measuring the resistance between the leads - a lowish value indicates that the two leads are legs of a winding, a high / open circuit value would indicate that you have the capacitor in your circuit.
I believe the motor will have two windings, that is 4 wires, plus two for the cap means there are internal connections already made. I suggest you temporaly connect two wires together, then connect to the mains with a large (100watt or more) lamp in series to limit the current. If nothing happens, you are connected across the cap, try a different connection. If it hums but does not turn, you are getting close but need to try again. If it turns slowly, that is the proper connection and you can take the lamp out of the circuit.