Jraef,
I found 75 hp following the salesman recommandation. he said that the wk^2 value on the motor's chart is the maximum inertia a motor can carry. I don't think he's right (I'd say it's the rotor inertia?). You said I should determine the torque I need to run my tool but as I said, at full speed (3600RPM) there is no torque except motor's restriction. So, once the tool has reach its full speed, no more external torque will be applied to the motor. I tried to use the formula you gave me and I have some interrogations. First, the wk^2 calculation, it says that it's motor rotor inertia+load inertia*load rpm^2/motor rpm^2. How the load speed could be different than the motor speed? Secondly, the Seconds to full speed doesn't tell me which motor size I should choose. Theorically, even if you have a tool with a lot of inertia, the smallest torque will be able to accelerate it to full speed. In practice, you will agree that if your motor is too small, it will overload before reaching its full speed. So, how can I deal with that? Is there a minimum time to full speed that can use as a thumb rule? Can I have this information with the motor specs?
Thanks,