Dana, your tempering times and temperatures will only be relevant if you got a full transformation to martensite in the first place.
That requires proper set up of the steel's condition prior to austenizing, steel alloy type, temperature control and and soak time at the correct temp, and achieving full hardness by using the proper quench media.
You can heat up a piece of steel and get it any color you want, but that color is irrelevnat if you did not acquire full hardness in the first place.
Focus on getting your KNOWN steel fully transfered to martensite and THEN concern yourself with tempering.
All of those tempering times and temperatures are designed to complete retained austenite transformation to martensite, and to relieve induced stresses from creating the martensite formation in the first place.
They mean nothing without full hardness achieved in the first place.
You can put any old piece of steel in an oven and turn it some color, but that has nothing to do with its hardness.
It all depends on your successes prior to that point.
Even the atmosphere of the oven will effect the color. But what we need to do FIRST is get full hardness of the steel.
that is done with knowing the alloy of the steel you have, proper temp control and soak times for that alloy, and creating martensite with the right quench media.