When I wrote my page on the things, I tried to be very specific as to what applied to saturated vs. un-saturated cells. I seemed to have a lot more info on the un-saturated type. The reason is that properly constructed saturated cells don't seem to have any inherent degradation that limits their life. It's the users that damage them. I'm pretty sure they can go more than 100 years if the materials were pure, the oven temperature is low and people stay the heck away from the terminals.
Un-saturated cells, OTOH, have a finite life. Certainly all Eppley un-saturated cells are useless by now. I've no idea who might have produced them more recently, but odds are that all unsaturated cells should be retired. They may well produce almost 1.018 volts, but the value won't be stable over time, even if the temperature is. That's why a minimum voltage is required for certification. IMO, some of the cases were really pretty, especially the Weston models, and can make a nice case for a solid state reference. Just install a DC jack in the rear and run it off a wall wart. The cases are thermally lagged with aluminum and even copper on the older ones. You could ovenize it if you wanted.
(BTW, my page was decent when I wrote it, but the discussion here and pages people have done since, really add to the total information.)