Commercially, no, but I have been asked for a lot more details and pack building advice over the years and there are quite a few of these now, as far away as Japan and the United States, and of course not everybody will contact me so in that sense it was a success. The pictures tell the story, really, the most important thing is to handle the balancing wires correctly, that's a 'minor detail' that unfortunately even professional designers often get wrong with really bad outcomes as the result.
Balancing wires and physical damage to the pack because of insufficient rigidity of the shell and a lack of shock absorbing material are the main causes of pack problems, water ingestion and bad materials / manufacturing defects are also a real problem.
The balancing wires, shell rigidity, shock absorbers and seals are all on the manufacturer, how you treat the pack and monitor it is on the user.
The worst are the pannier mounted ones, I personally think these should all be recalled and replaced. I've seen more than a few of those that had internal signs of fire damage and that must have come within a hair of thermal runaway.