A taller sprue increases the velocity of the metal, which is not what you want.
When I started backyard casting, I used very tall sprues, and one of our members (luckygen) illustrated that you don't need a tall sprue extending above the top of the cope at all.
These days, the top of my sprue is at the top of the cope (mold), and I use a 1" tall piece of pipe as a catch ring at the sprue.
I keep the lip of the crucible as close to the top of the spure as possible when pouring, even touching the top of the spure.
You don't want a waterfall effect, since that churns air and slag into the melt.
I heat my aluminum as fast as possible, being careful not to overheat the metal, and also pouring immediately when pour temperature is reached.
If you let the alumimum linger at or over pour temperature, it will absorb a lot of hydrogen.
I don't use any flux with aluminum.
The flux that I have heard that works with aluminum is pool shock, which creates some extremely toxic gas (nerve gas I think), and I would not recommend using that.
I have also see some on ytube recommend using washing soda, but that has no effect on aluminum, and several folks including myself have proven that. If you back the washing soda in the oven and drive off the moisture, then you will see that it just sits on top of molten aluminum and does absolutely nothing. It will not even mix with molten aluminum.
Aluminum castings will not be brittle just because they have some porosity from hydrogen.
Hydrogen porosity shows up as pinholes in the metal surface.
If the casting will be painted, you will not see the pinholes.
Even if the casting is not painted, the pinholes are not very noticeable.
You can use an inert gas bubbled through the molten aluminum to degas it, such as argon I think.
Best thing to do is just heat the aluminum as fast as possible, and pour immediately at 1,350 F.
This is what I do, and I don't use any flux, and I don't have porosity.
I will start a thread to show my aluminum casting gaffes, when I started trying backyard casting in 2011.
There is no need for anyone to repeat my mistakes.
I became an expert and finding every conceivable casting mistake that could be made, before I got it figured out.
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