In industrial settings (oil, mining, large municipal water), the diagram shows three power lines (T1, T2, T3) with no capacitors or start relays. The direction of rotation is critical; the diagram will specify that swapping any two leads reverses the pump direction, which can reduce flow to near zero or unscrew the impeller from the shaft. Three-phase diagrams also frequently include a ground-fault monitor and a lightning arrestor, as long cable runs in open terrain are vulnerable to surges. The Art of Reading the Diagram: Symbols and Logic Interpreting a submersible pump wiring diagram requires familiarity with electrical symbols. A squiggly line denotes a resistor or heating element (overload). A circle with a diagonal line is a thermal switch. Parallel arcs represent a capacitor. Most importantly, the diagram uses dashed lines to indicate mechanical linkages—for example, between the current-sensing coil and the relay contacts.

This is common for residential wells (depth < 300 feet). A 2-wire pump has no external control box; the starting switch is inside the motor. Its diagram is deceptively simple: two hot lines (L1 and L2) and a ground. However, the internal winding diagram shows a permanent split capacitor (PSC) circuit.

A 3-wire single-phase pump requires a control box. The diagram here shows three motor leads: black (start winding), red (run winding), and yellow (common). The control box schematic interconnects the start capacitor, run capacitor, and voltage-sensing relay between these leads. Miswiring the start and run leads—a common error—will cause the motor to hum, overheat, and burn out within minutes.