Each of those posts said "wait" for one thing or another. It is possible that these wells had an IP (initial production) at those numbers and then died off. If they did not know what the wells could sustain, they should have kept their mouths shut. Maybe after IP they were not worth talking about any more. This may be why there were never any numbers pr'd. It is not a crime to say “I think it will do this”, or “Today it is doing this”. And then be proven wrong.
If you follow any O & G company and look at where the numbers are after IP, the numbers are usually dramatically lower then when they first turn them on. Maybe they sold some oil and then they bled off and only produced water... or more water than is economically viable to keep the well on.
Again my point is we don't know. How much did they produce on the first day? And how much was produced on the last day? We may never know. John C has the ultimate authority to know if they were worth bringing over or let the die a slow and painful death.