I guess it's somewhat interesting to know what results amateurs achieve with the actual product, because that's the typical use scenario?
If it takes a professional lab to install the product to obtain the theoretical results, then the end-user can practically ignore that info.
I would be interested in knowing what a user like myself can get from a product, such as a consensus among actual/amateur users messing around with installing the stuff in home office environments.
The issue there is you have so many uncontrolled variables in each case when it comes to the at-home user.
Way to many opportunities for things to go tits up from user error, only to then be blamed on the product because everyone likes to rate themselves a "4 out of 4" for technical expertise.
It takes someone with dedication and resolve to do exactly what tw33k did, to compare the two products in a controlled setting in which the only variable that is being changed is the TIM itself. Same hardware, same environment, same end-user making the application.
It makes the Pro vs. Ultra results as apples-to-apples comparable as it can get.