One way to check for counterfeit silver/gold coins is to "slide" them down a ramp made of neodymium magnets. You can see an example here, or just look up "silver slide". I have seen this work for various coins and it is claimed that this is due to "eddy current breaking" which occurs when a diamagnetic material is exposed to a changing magnetic field.
Pretty much the only coins I have tried that did not slide noticeably slower are modern nickles (75% Cu, 25% Ni) and American Gold Eagles (91.67% Au, 3% Ag, 5.33% Cu). The slowest coin was a modern dime (91.67% Cu, 8.33% Ni). I have quantitative data on all this but not sure if it adds much to figure out how to include a table here... but I saw a factor of ~6 difference.
I have read that bismuth is the most diamagnetic element, eg is about 8x more diamagnetic than silver.
So if I cast a round (ie, a coin) about the size of a quarter out of 99.99% bismuth should it slide slowly down a magnetic ramp?