Here is another option that may work, in blue, and rotate the pattern on the left 90 degrees.
Use a short sprue, no pour basin, smooth transition into a runner that has an offset spin trap at the end that is vented out the top of the cope, and knife gates into the parts.
Nobody seems to use knife gates regardless of the part, but they are very useful when the gate enters a thin section.
Hobby folks almost universally use a pour basin, but I don't know of any better way to churn air, slag, and bifilms into aluminum than to use a pour basin. A pour basin is not required, and I never use them.
A tall spure also churns a lot of air and trash into the melt due to the high velocity it creates.
Sometimes I use a 1" tall section of 3" pipe laying on top the cope at the sprue, as a sort of catch wall.
You can practice pour technique using water, but don't put water into a crucible unless you bake it dry afterwards.
Pouring is non-linear; you fill the spure as fast as possible, and then reduce the flow when the runner is full, but keep the sprue full at all times.
High velocity is your #1 enemy.
You want a somewhat slow, smooth, unbroken flow of metal into the mold cavities.
And I use a 1/16" vent at the high point of each mold cavity, to relieve any trapped air.
Some folks don't vent, but better to vent and not need it than to not vent and potentially trap air in the mold as has happened to me.
Abrupt changes in the path of flowing molten aluminum breaks the bifilm exterior of the flowing metal, and churns slag, air and bifilms into the mix, and can also dig into the sand mold and cause sand inclusions.
Enemy #2 is abrubt changes in the flow of metal.
Having a spin trap at the end of the runner keeps the metal from hitting a dead end, which causes a pressure wave back through the melt, and splashes metal into the mold. You want to avoid splashing anywhere.
You may need a riser in the center of the runner between the two patterns.
Gates at the top of the runner, so that they scrape off slag that normally floats on top the melt.
Never let the sprue go dry once you start filling, otherwise you will aspirate air.
The flow rate is controlled by the gates.
Don't try and control flow rate (velocity) by the sprue base.
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