I occasionally change the shape of a mainspring or frizzen spring as they have come with a lock, or their replacement. I heat to cherry red and make the spring the shape I want, then polish it. Then I heat it in an oxy/acet. flame away from the oxydizing part of the flame - in other words out in the broad part of the flame, to non magnetic red. To do this I just sit it on a fire brick. I try to hold the spring at that temp for at least a minute to let it soak at that critical temperature. I quench the spring in new motor oil - 2 litres. Then the spring is glass hard, so I carefully repolish it to bright again. I now draw the temper. I have a 1/4" thick plate of copper into which I have drilled holes that match the spring's tit. this allows the spring to lay on its edge with full contact on the copper. I secure the copper plate in the vise, and heat it from underneath slowly. I watch for the colours to come through the spring, backing off the torch flame away from the plate as I near the finished brilliant blue. When the spring is at purple, I usually take the flame away and just watch. I add a little more heat to let the metal come up to that fabulous blue AND STAY THERE! I like to let the plate and spring cool by itself, and this allows the spring to cook at the temper heat without fear of going past, ro having molecules in the spring that did not get to the correct temperature, as it might if I flick it off onto the Bench, or quench it. Commercial lock springs hardened and tempered like this very rarely break. Our tendency is to not draw the temper far enough.
I have no idea of what steel these springs are made. And the only thing that I can suggest ab\out a "second blue", is doing the tempering process twice, because the polished spring only goes through the colour change once, as far as I can see.