Could you define "a slope not significantly different from unity" a little better?
Here's what I found:
Old Chain
PT Watts = (1.0543 * Polar Watts) - 24.181W, CV = 2.4%, R^2 = 0.9762
New Chain
PT Watts = (1.0219 * Polar Watts) - 8.5696W, CV = 1.8%, R^2 = 0.9937
Thinking about this some more, if you consider that the "state" of the chain at any given time is somewhere between the 2 "extremes" I separated out, then the best fit to use overall would be the one for the full data set. The CV will be larger since there isn't any "middle" data...but the way it stands now, the fit is:
PT Watts = (Polar Watts * 0.997) - 5.7W, CV = 2.6%, R^2 = 0.9839
That looks like a pretty constant ~5-6W offset, and the CV looks reasonable considering the claimed % accuracy of the 2 devices...and that's why I've set my FTP for the PT at 5W lower than my Polar FTP.