Darmy - 95 F may be an accurate ambient temperature, but you need to specify a temperature rise or maximum conductor temperature to get a meaningful ampacity. 95 F is 35 C, so be on the safe side and assume a 40 C ambient. Temperature rise could be anywhere from 10 C to 60 C under normal conditions depending on the conditions for which the line was designed. There are current-temperature rise graphs for ampacity in the Aluminum Electrical Conductors Handbook. You should also take into account emissivity of the conductor (how black it is, basically), whether sun is present, wind speed, altitude (this is Colorado, right?), etc.
All the above takes some work to calculate, even more if you are going to account for emergency loading at higher temperatures which will sag your conductor as dpc pointed out, so most people cop out and use a table. The one I have handy (Hubbell/Anderson Technical Data) says 400 A for 336.4 kcmil AAC based on 61% IACS aluminum alloy, average temperature rise 30 C above 40 C ambient, horizontal, 60 Hz, outdoors, 2 fps wind, minimum 18" spacing. No mention of sun or emissivity.
Different tables will be based on different conditions and hence will have different ampacities. I have seen ampacities from tables differ by up to 50%. No offence, but it sounds like you don't have the technical background to come up with a meaningful ampacity number. Better start talking to your distribution engineers.