This is what we have found.
I did a test when I was sent a pound of the XBR. THe conditions that day were a really overcast and reary 53 to 55 degrees, a typical Houston Winter Day. The velocities with the top load of 31.8 grns was an average 3470-3480.
Accuracy was outstanding.
Last Saturday, the temperature was just about the same, but the sun was shining, the humidity was at 30 percent or less, a typical beautiful Houston day after a front comes through. The Rail,Gun was now locked into a bullet holes worth of verticle, and got worse as we dropped the charge. Only when we went up to 32.4 did the thing assume it's good manners.
We set my Ohlear 35P up and found that it now took 34.4 grns of powder to do what 31.8 did before. The only difference is instead of overcast and humid, it was clear and crisp.
Look, all we can do is put the rail gun on the bench, set the Chrono up, watch the flags, and try to shoot some good groups. I am certainly no "ballistitian". We just try to give real world results.
What we have found so far is we can get good velocity, great accuracy, a clean burn, and reasonble case life when the temperature is in the 50's. Although it takes more by weight to shoot the same as 133, it is more dense to the extent that it is no problem getting the upper load window charge in the case. We had to tweek it some when the weather, (not temperature), changed. Notice, I am trying like heck to avoid even uttering the word "humidity", because that would start a war of words that we best avoid.
I do suspect that when the weather turns warmer, the upper end load will probably be in the 31.5 grn. As to whether XBR will be overall easier to tune than 133, or anything else, I don't know.
But, in time, we will all find out.........jackie