playiing with sparky stuff is dangerous be bloody careful...... or better yet have all your work checked over by a live sparky before powering it up....
is the solenoid putting enough drive on the contactor?
if you've picked the weak phase from the rotary (and Im assuming you have the setup that takes single phase in then uses a 3 leg output and capacitors to "replicate" three phases and not a single phase motor driving a 3 phase alternator) to drive the solenoid it may not have enough grunt under load to hold the contacts in place. try switching the wiring for the solenoid to one of the other "phases"
if the capacitors that offset the phases are dicey you'll get the same problem.
assuming its not an overload taking down the rotary and that all else is ok and your not looking at a star delta start controller.... and that you're trying to use a 240v solenoid on a 240v circuit and not a 415v circuit
if you wire the solenoid to operate off of the single phase that feeds the rotary and then have the contacts switch the output of the rotary to the motor.
if that works and nothing else is electrically faulty and the solenoid pulls in correctly on proper mains voltage your on or beyond the limit of the converter on startup.
as a guess and without all the details to drive you 4hp 3 phase motor up near full load start conditions you'd want to be looking at about 10 HP worth of converter. for reliable no load starts youd probaly get way with about 5 and maybe something like 7 for no load starts but full torque at rated RPM.
just be careful to watch your voltages under load, the lazy phase can drop low enough and slip sync enough to cause problems if you run near the limits for too long.


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