Oh come on.. you have a lot of electric toys around, and frankly..
even without formal training you really know a thing or two about electric motors,
you are not just colormatching wires until it works...
you might know more than you are actually aware of (at worse)
you might not be aware of WHY you don't do this or that,
but you have a strong feeling you shouldn't, right?
So yeah I got mad at you
(as mad as you'd get with a family member if s/he tries to stop a circular saw with his/her bare hands, not as mad at you get at the junkie trying to pick pocket your wallet that is

)
So yes, strong words... not to hurt you, but only to make perfectly sure,
alim's motor is not getting fried because of what I feel (knowing is a different page in this book tbh) is a sure deathsentence for his motor..
Remember, it's not my motor, it's not yours and even the risk of burning it because of OUR advice is nothing that should be taken lightly IMHO...
I think we not only should take care that nobody gets hurt because of what we tell people on this forum (although that's a higher priority!)
We should also at least try to keep all their engines, motors and karts in working condition.
So yeah, because I had a strong feeling this was going haywire
"oh well then I justbuy and fry a controller I don't need and the motor I have instead of testing first"
- that's what a previous post read for me -
I got a little nervous, and worded stronger than before..
just like one would garab their kid's arm stronger than usual to stop it from walking in front of the bus
If you took that personally, my apologies for that.
BTW:
I haven't said "no load" bench testing, have I?
I'd test w/o load first of course (to get some idea or baseline let's say)
but then I'd increase the loads until the controller get's too hot for my taste..
and then derive my further assumptions from that..
eventually I'd stress test (firmly mounted motor of course; that's obvious, isn't it?)
to see how hot the motor gets at near stalling speeds before the controller dies...
(I said it'll be wasted eventually)
and then make my final call based on what I've learned so far.
the hotter the motor gets the closer it is to it's maximum amperage.
stalling speed (high load), controller died the magic dragon death and the motor is still cool to the touch... 100Amp controller!
Sure an Amp meter would come in handy, but even just careful observation
of the temperatures of the motor controller, wires and batteries can tell you a lot
and it's totally free it only takes time and some precaution whilst testing.
I haven't gotten into any details yet AFAIR, there was no need yet (assuming testing is not going to happen anyways and such)
'sid