Its nice to have access to your BMS no matter what it is to see what its doing so you have an informed picture of what's what.
eg: you can see cell peaking at 3.65V when pack voltage is still at 54V because the bulk manufactorer factory never has time to match cells together at the same SOC (they should match cell capacities though and I'm sure they do, well maybe back in the day but now they are all the same I assume). The problem starts when one cell is 10% higher than the rest for some reason for example, the BMSs available on the market are not equipped to handle 300Ah cells with their puny mA passive setup. This is probably all the high voltage alarms new owners see when the battery is new and is not behaving normally but sorts itself out over time (weeks or months) without 90% of the users knowing any better.
I assume most of the batteries sold here has no access to BMS (like we see with bluetooth batteries on youtube), which I guess is a good thing, lots of damage can be done if a saboteur had access: eg; this one youtuber ordered 16 280Ah cells and was making a video how to top balance with a power supply before assembling with bms, somehow he bumped the knob on the power supply while reaching for something in the garage and bumped the voltage from 3.65V to 4.2V. The next morning all the prismatic eve 280k cells were swollen. Puffed up like balloons, brand new.
Long story short, he still built his battery (minus any compression obviously) and the pack could still handle 2C and had 80% SOH.
IMHO, anyone that can access the BMS should void the warranty, but who cares about a warranty when I have 16 cells on a shelf with all the terminals torqued to 5nm (triple checked, 1: assembly, 2: full load discharge test, 3: nope, that's it, I lied, only have to double check, well maybe check every 6 months).
Who needs a warranty anyway when a cell costs R2k and a BMS costs R2k.