This is turning into one of the most pathetic cases of back pedaling I have ever seen.
As you may or may not recall the original graphs (shh I have copies of them as I figured they would be replaced) showed the single cell 25c 5Ah test at 120amps and holding around 3.7v throughout the discharge, and the 2s 35c 4.2Ah pack tested at 60amps and holding around 3.3vpc average throughout the discharge.
Now the graph for the 25c 5Ah cell is missing, and there is a new graph for the 4200ss. This time it is a single cell test at 120amps that shows the cell holding only 3.1v average and requiring forced air cooling to keep it from exceeding 130 degrees. The cell also gave up only 3.49Ah before hitting 3v cutoff. That works out to a test that lasted around 1.75 minutes and had a temperature delta of 50 + degrees.
If the graphs of the 4200ss are at all representative of its typical performance I can't imagine why anyone would buy it. It does not appear to hold voltage and it's chemistry seems to be a bit volatile for my tastes. But not to fear, I'm certain that as soon as Jason realizes that his graph shows less then stellar performance he will replace it with something that portrays a better company image.