Maybe this will help:
Oils are generally classified by their ability to transfer heat as fast, medium or slow “speed” oils (Table 2). Fast (8-10 second) oils are used for low hardenability alloys, carburized and carbonitrided parts, and large cross-sections that require high cooling rates to produce maximum properties. Medium (11-14 second) oils are typically used to quench medium- to high-hardenability steels. Slow (15-20 second) oils are used where hardenability of a steel is high enough to compensate for the slow cooling aspects of this medium [2].
So, since you are referring to 1095, which is a shallow hardening steel, or "low hardenability" steel, the 8-10 second 'fast' oil would work well.
Don't forget that for a quench oil to do its job correctly, the steel must first be sufficiently converted to austenite at a somewhat controlled temp to be converted to martensite with the quench.
Those 'seconds' are referring to the oil's ability to extract temperature at a rate that will lower the steel's temp from XXX # of degrees to YYY # of degrees in a given amount of time.