E-driver_ said:
Hmm so perhaps it could be 52 amp controller as they say then?
You can eiher measure the amps, or you can calculate it from the volts and watts. Guessing what it is isn't really all that useful to you.
Always measure whenever you can, if you want to know something. Anything else is a guess of one sort or another.
If you want a guess, I agree with Chalo's calculation (which is based on an average system voltage rather than the actual voltage at the moment of your wattage reading).
But measuring will get you a real number--even a cheap meter's readings are usually better than trusting numbers provided by a seller (who has every reason to lie to get people to buy more things and give them more money).
They claim this wattage is normal, since the motor is only 1000watts. Could that be correct?
The wattage you see on the meter has nothing to do with the motor rating. A motor rating is just a number the person that rated it decided to rate it at, and often has little to do with what it is capable of, and nothing at all to do with how much power it is actually taking to operate at any instant in time.
The wattage reading on your meter has only to do with the physical load you are placing on the system (causing the motor to draw current from the controller and the controller from the battery), the controller's battery current limit, and the voltage the system sags to at that instant because of the load.
I am not sure if my wattmeter measures amps.
It likely has some instructions with it or on the website it was purchased from or it's manufacturer website that describe it's functions and usage, but generally the Amps are labelled with an A, as Watts are labelled with a W, and Volts are labelled with a V.
It may also have a "rotating" display that continuously changes between several different readings. Typically these include a Vmin, or lowest voltage the system dropped to, an Amax, or highest current the system ever drew, and sometimes a Wmax or highest wattage. It may also include an Ah and/or Wh reading of how many total Ah (amp-hours) / Wh (watt-hours) have passed thru the meter since it was last reset (or powered on), representing the capacity used out of the battery.
This manual is for a different meter (the original design of RC wattmeter that all the others are almost certainly based on), but is likely useful for deciphering yours:
https://cdn.sparkfun.com/assets/8/9/5/b/4/watts-up-dc-watt-meter-amp-meter-user-manual_v1.9.pdf
View attachment watts-up-dc-watt-meter-amp-meter-user-manual_v1.9[1].pdf