History:
There is an equation to determine the dynamic load rating "C" of a bearing. It takes into consideration only the geometry of the rolling elements in a bearing. Things like the number of balls or rollers, the diameter of the balls or rollers, the length of the rollers, the contact angle, etc. are used. By this standard, if two manufacturers make a deep groove ball bearing with the exact same number of balls and the same diameter of balls, they should have the exact same dynamic load rating.
Here is something I found online that shows the equation to be used:
This is where it gets complicated.
Based on Hertzian contact theory, the C value, based on the geometry and equation described above, is the load at which the classic L10 life will reach 1 million revolutions with 90% reliability (which is to say if we apply to a bearing an equivalent load equal to the C value, then out of 100 bearings tested at this load, 90% of them will surpass 1 million revolutions before the first sign of fatigue (spalling) is visible on the surface of the raceways. 10% of them will not.).
The L10 life test specification is dictated by ISO. Criteria such as the lubricant viscosity (oil), speed and specific cleanliness parameters, are used.
However, L10 life is not only affected by the geometry of the rolling elements, oil and cleanliness. Other factors such as surface roughness of the raceways and balls, steel grade, steel heat treatment, osculation, etc. will also affect the life of the bearing.
Bearing suppliers therefore felt that the improvements they were doing to the design of the bearings were not captured in the pure calculated geometry calculation method of the C value based on the equation. They started to add "compensation factors" to increase the C values for their bearings. In turn, the L10 life would increase as well (since L10 = (C/P)^3 for ball bearings and L10 = (C/3)^(10/3) for roller bearings).
Additionally, the bearing suppliers know that customers, when comparing bearing "quality", simply look at the load rating and pick the highest one. After all, this will result in a greater calculated L10 life based on the equation. Often in machine design, the customer will ask "minimum life of 100 000 hours based on L10", and therefore the designer can simply select the bearing with the highest load rating to reach that life requirement.
Lower tier manufacturer will tend to inflate their numbers by greater values in an attempt to get customers to buy their product under the pretense that theirs will last longer. Based on the L10 equation, it will last longer, but in reality, they rarely do (theoretical life vs. service life).
And so the war began. One manufacturer boosts their load ratings. Others boost accordingly because customers would get the perception their bearings were of lower quality. Once everyone changed their load ratings, others increased their values even more so to distinguish themselves from the others.
To justify the increases in load ratings, bearing manufacturers started to add additional compensation factors to the "C" value to take into account other parameters. In the fine print of their publications, they say "our L10 life is calculated considering a perfect cleanliness and perfect lubrication scenario". This means that they can greatly increase the "C" value as they please, as long as they stipulate the conditions in which the "C" value is valid. They don't come right out to say this however. Often times it is written very small in the catalogue, or it simply says to contact their engineering department for more information on the validity of the C values and the result of the L10 life calculation based on this C value.
Only two suppliers that I know of have had independent testing to validate their increased load ratings, and those are SKF and FAG. A third party has verified the values in the catalogue with tests and independently certified that the values are correct and not inflated beyong their means. This was only done for spherical roller bearings however.
Most suppliers consider the "C" value to be used in the L10 life calculation considering a 1.0 kappa ratio (oil film safety factor). Some low tier manufacturers, from China typically, offer a C value in the catalogue based on a perfect lubrication scenario (4.0 kappa ratio -- which is full elastohydrodynamic film lubrication).
Overall, do not be fooled by the number in the catalogue. The dynamic load rating values are simply numbers that are to be used in the L10 life equation, and that result is theoretical. Different manufacturers have changed their C values based on different testing conditions. We cannot compare apples to apples in this case.
Certain bearing manufacturers have gone to ISO to try and standardize the methods for C value calculation and L10 life calculation. However, standardizing this would have many lower tier suppliers not being able to compete with the high end tier suppliers on load ratings. This would result in lower tier suppliers going bankrupt, others not following ISO and therefore doing their own thing. The jury is still out on what to do on this matter to make everyone happy.
In your case of the Timken inch-sized taper roller bearings, it is definitely possible that they have changed the dynamic load rating value "C" to accommodate the perceived life increased of the case carburized heat treatment. Some suppliers believe case carburized results in longer service life. Others believe a through hardened steel will provide longer service life. Both arguments are valid, as which heat treatment will be best depends on the operating conditions in which the bearing is used.
Timken does not make a bad bearing. Not at all. In North America you would be hard pressed to find a better priced/quality ratio for taper roller bearings.
In conclusion, the thing to consider is stay with one of the major manufacturers (SKF, FAG, NSK, TIMKEN) and do not base your decision solely on a number in the catalogue.
If it was me, I would pick the bearing based on service level of the manufacturer, pricing, availability, and also which company is best in different types of bearings.
For example:
SKF is great at spherical roller bearings.
FAG is great at cylindrical roller bearings.
NSK is great at deep groove ball bearings.
TIMKEN is great at taper roller bearings.
Every supplier has their strong suit.