According to literature I have, the A 286 material has 3 options for heat treatment; the Class A solution treatment at 1650 deg F and subsequent age hardening is for optimum short-time tensile properties, and is within the range of mechanical properties per the ASTM specification.
The 1800 deg F solution treatment is for optimum stress rupture properties with Class B for liquid quench, and Class C for oil quench, which depends on section thickness hardenability.
Class A is desired for service conditions where short-time tensile properties are important at ambient to moderate temperatures. Class B and C are interchangable for elevated temperature service (stress rupture) because you are only dealing with different cooling mediums for optimum hardnability, prior to age hardening.
All three classes meet tensile properties as published, but they are not all interchangeable, it depends on service conditions.
Source: Materials Data Handbook on A 286