I use to work in a battery plant a few years ago as a cast on strap operator and had a huge lead pot on my machine, I'm guessing probably about the size of a 35 gallon tub. The bars or "pigs" we're around 75 lbs. They were marked with different color paint strips to note the hardness. Some were remelted lead from scrap and weren't marked. I've seen the blue color as well as gold and green, and sometimes a combination of all like gas on water. That pot ran into two manifolds that we're a higher temp than the lead pot itself and once it ran though the manifold it would sometimes change colors or be the sliver we're use to seeing. I always figured it was due to different temps as as well as a different alloy or a mixture of alloys. Main thing is have no cold pours and keep the drouse to a minimum to help with splash and hold some heat in the top. And don't over heat your mold. I don't believe the color will mean much.