Ok, so my silver chloride is going to be precipitated and some still dissolved in solution, all mixed in with aluminum oxide corundum.
If I use pure aluminum to precipitate dissolved silver chloride to silver, that would still leave the non dissolved silver chloride in the currently gray milky gritty mud? If I proceed to melt, I would be melting silver chloride crystals, aluminum oxide and the precipitated silver together?
Silver Chloride is not going to be in solution and as such will not precipitate with Aluminum or other substances.
The only way to get out what is there is filtering it cold.
Hot strong AR can hold a bit of Silver Chloride just enough that it is a impurity for the refined Gold
Since this is Jewelers scrap, there is a likelihood that there is Tin in there
and then it is also likely that what you have is Metastannic acid.
It is hard to filter.
This creates a catch 22 situation.
Metastannic acid need to be dried and roasted, then dissolved in HCl
Silver Chloride need to be kept wet and converted by Lye/Sugar or Sulfuric/Iron or Zinc
How much Silver Chloride are we talking about?
It might be beneficial to just forget about the Silver Chloride this time.
Filter the solution and dry what is in the filter, then roast it until glowing a dull red for some time while stirring it.
Then dissolve what can be dissolved in HCl.
And you are ready to try again.
In retrospect the first thing you need to do next time with sweeps/mud is to roast it thoroughly then dissolve all that can in HCl.
This will get rid of Tin and Iron.