You probably know this but those charts are just generalities. You really can't take much else from them as there are several factors that can effect burn rates. One such example I'll give, because I'm quite familiar with both powders and their characteristics is n120 vs h4198. A few charts show h4198 as being faster and that might or might not be true in some cartridges. I have used a lot of both in 30BR and 30 Major(grendel) cases. In every instance n120 has been faster, considerably so. In those two cartridges, it's about 2 full grains faster on average. That's not a small amount when you consider the case capacity involved here and that the chart would imply that a safe charge of h4198 would be safe with n120, but that is NOT the case. With the light bullets typically used in those two cases, it's hard to get enough h4198 in there to be dangerously hot but with n120, that's just not true and this is just one example where if you put 35.0 grains of n120 in a 30BR case, I'd pretty much promise extreme pressures or worse yet, it comes unwound on ya. I'm sure there are other examples but I'm just very familiar with this one.
Just be careful when using burn rate charts is all I'm saying. There's more to burn rates than meets the eye at times.