Hi Allie - thanks for the follow up! And what an interesting (and strange) discovery...
Here's what I can tell about Khan's PT1 and both sections of its RC:
The first RC is real and taken from June 2012 (PT 66), but even it exhibits an oddity: on the original June 2012 test the first passage was about Digital Publishing, but for some reason the Khan test has moved that to passage 4, and shifted the other three passages up one, so the original passage 2 is now first, etc! The overall content is the same, but the order, for no discernible reason, has been completely rearranged.
I have no idea why they'd do that—my suspicion is that Khan just made a mistake and haven't bothered to correct it—but it changes the fundamental nature of the section is a worrying way: with the passages reordered you're experiencing the test differently than those who originally took it...i.e. those for whom the original curve/scale was created. So immediately I'm forced to view this test as regrettably "other" than the authentic experience it's purported to represent
And the experimental RC section is, somewhat unbelievably, even worse!
What's happened in the second (exp) RC is they've replaced the entire third passage from December 2007 (PT 53)—a passage that was originally Comparative Reading with five questions (about Research Commercialization)—with a single passage that has seven questions, and doesn't appear to be from any released LSAT. The result is that this section now has 29 total questions, which is more than any RC section has ever had, and no Comparative Reading at all! It also has a passage (#3) that isn't on any available test, so trying to Blind Review it or even find explanations for it is impossible.
In other words, for no apparent reason, they've created an RC section that's too long, that's missing a passage construction that appears on every test, and that has a rogue passage taken from some mysterious source....possibly even a non-LSAT source, where Khan created a simulated passage themselves and decided to throw that in (I have no idea if that's the case, but given that it's not from any available LSAT I can't think of an alternative; I even checked the free LSAT India tests and it doesn't come from those either).
So that's the rundown of what you get in RC on Khan's PT1.
It also illustrates why I, and so many others in the industry, constantly caution students about relying too heavily on Khan as they prep. It's great that there is more free test content available—kudos to LSAC for taking the initiative there!—but the way in which it's presented and administered is so half-baked and sloppy that in many instances it's doing more harm than good. So by all means use it, but only as an occasional supplement, where you proceed with caution and recognize that it's often just a well-intentioned monument to mediocrity