Dave,DaveR and Jerry,
I agree Jerry...All three of you in fact.
Thanks so much for your detailed advice and sharing your hard won knowledge. It is much appreciated and I hope to do it justice. Just a few days ago my wife said she was interested in making Dichroic glass jewelry..guess what, one needs an oven for that work. So popping for a furnace is a win win.
DaveR, how long is your crucible ?
I came across the info below it is from the 1924 machinery handbook. It may be of interest...
Casehardening for Colors. -- For hardening and at the same time coloring such parts as wrenches, etc., the following mixture may be used: Mix 10 parts of charred bone, 6 parts of wood charcoal, 4 parts of charred leather and 1 part of powdered cyanide. The leather should be black, crisp and well pulverized, and the four ingredients well mixed. The object in charring the bone and leather is to remove all grease. The parts to be colored must be well polished and should not be handled with greasy hands. To obtain satisfactory work, these rules must be observed. If the colors obtained are too gaudy, the cyanide may be omitted, and if there is still too much color, leave out the charcoal. The parts to be colored and hardened should be packed in a piece of common gas pipe having a closed end. Pipe is preferable because the pieces can be dumped into the cooling water with little or no exposure to the air. The open end of the pipe can be places close to the surface of the water before the parts are removed, but with a box there would be more or less exposure. This class of work should be heated to a dark cherry-red and kept at that temperature for about four or five hours. If the temperature is too high, no colors will appear. The tank should be arranged with a compressed air pipe connecting with the water pipe at the bottom in such a way that a jet of air is forced upward, thus filling the tank with bubbles. There should also be a sieve or basket in the tank for receiving the work. After quenching, place the parts in boiling water for five minutes and then bury them in dry sawdust for half an hour. Another mixture recommended for coloring consists of 10 parts granulated bone, 2 parts bone black and 1 part granulated charred leather.