Either you ate buying your motor exclusively from Jamaican motor suppliers, or you are not asking the right questions and using suppliers with the mental agility of gnats. Motors must be bought based on voltage AND frequency together. The only place I know of that uses 440V 50Hz is Jamaica. So most likely you are simply asking for 415V motors and they offer you 440V motors, those are 440V 60 Hz motors, and they are not explaining to you why they are doing that.
Motors produce torque, speed is determined by the applied frequency. So a motor is designed to provide a certain torque value AT a certain frequency, which can be expressed as a V/Hz ratio. As long as you maintain that V/Hz ratio, or close to it, the motor produces its rated torque regardless of frequencies. That is how a VFD works by the way.
So your supply is 415V 50Hz, that means your V/Hz ratio is 8.3:1 so if you use a motor with a V/Hz ratio within 10% of that value, it will produce rated torque without detrimental over heating. A very common motor design rating that falls into that category is a 460V 60Hz motor, which has a V/Hz design ratio of 7.67:1 and therefor is less than 10% different from your supply.
Your gnat brained motor suppliers however are trying to sell you the wrong thing if their motors are truly 440V 60Hz design, because that would be too low and that means a loss of torque, which then means at the same load, an increase in slip, which means higher current and more heat. If your motors are significantly over sized for the load it may be OK, but it will take some investigation on your part.
However, a LOT of people are just plain sloppy about this. In the US, there used to be numerous voltage levels used in industry in that general range; 440V, 450V, 460V, 480V etc. each utility had their own ideas. Long ago, there was a movement to standardize and the compromised motor utilization voltage is now 460V 60Hz, because it falls within 10% of all of those. But sloppy engineers sometimes don't look into that and "hear" from someone that we use 440V, so they design their motors for that. There are some countries that still use it as well, which adds to the problems. So if your suppliers are really selling you true 440V 60Hz motors, they are idiots. But it might just be an issue of that sloppiness in description, when in fact those motors are 460V 60Hz design. If they are, they will work fine for you.
Or you have found a Jamaican motor supply enclave mahn.
"Will work for (the memory of) salami"