I bought a second silverfish because my old one failed after 27 months. When I took the old one apart, I found it to be better constructed than some of the other batteries I own. The cells were mounted in a plastic form, covered on all six sides with a stiff fiberboard, and shrink wrapped. No glue. No tape. The cells are then pushed into the metal tube that forms the case of a SIlverfish, and they're padded with rubber. Pretty solid for a $200 pack, and I doubt it cost that much to make..
One surprise was that the ON/OFF switch is a heavy duty unit that actually switches the power from the cells. Most packs I've taken apart use a low current switch to toggle an on/off circuit in the BMS. That means the BMS has been always turned on, and it draws some residual power.