Finally, Ingots from column 4:
This was a mixed bag of leftovers, including a couple of sprues, some bicycle brake levers, a lot of long thin extrusion scrap which I kept piling in through the top of the furnace, and even some spills from former casting sessions.
And yet, the ingots look pretty good. Probably the sprues and spills were high quality casting stock originally, and these mixed with extrusions produced muffins with qualities somewhere in between the others. Fairly good grain, reasonable shrinkage, rounded shape to the ingot. Definitely usable stock.
So, what's the conclusion?
well, if you don't want to hate casting aluminum, don't assume the stock you receive is going to work directly out of the scrap heap and cast into a part. Instead cast it as ingots first. This will allow you to cull anything you don't like the looks of and avoid the disappointment of a failed casting session. It will also allow you to clean your stock by skimming, and remove any pieces of embedded steel, which some cast auto parts contain. It produces convenient size stock for melting, and allows you to reserve extra special quality ingots (like column 2) for a project that might need it.