I am not a metallurgical expert but I do believe the point of a charcoal blue is to build an oxide coating as noted above. First, it is definitely derivative of a higher temperature than the lower-temp 'bright blue.' I do not know the exact temperature but it is definitely at the so-called "black red" heat, i.e if you were to yank the barrel out of the fire in a completely dark room, you would get the barest impression of the barrel being on the cusp of beginning to glow in a dark manner. The point burying the barrel in the charcoal - in my opinion - is to provide a heat source but at the same time to ensure that the majority of the oxygen is consumed (by the burning charcoal) so that the amount of oxygen reaching the barrel will permit a coating to develop but will at the same time be restrained enough to ensure that it will not scale off. That's how it seems to me. I guess the bottom line is that there is no way anyone would mistake a lower-temp 'temper blue' for a charcoal blue. The two are completely different things.