Treating the shells after initial de-waxing to simulate the conditions in the autoclave by either boiling in water, steaming above water or autoclaving at 180 °C and 0.8 MPa caused changes in the reported flexural strength. For samples initially de-waxed by autoclave the strength was reduced, boiling caused the greatest strength reduction and re-autoclaving gave the least change. Testing wet always gave lower strengths compared to dry. However, initial dry strength was never regained on further drying. The samples prepared by refrigeration lost strength when boiled or steamed but gained strength on autoclave treatment. The strength built to be 57% of the samples de-waxed by autoclave in the dry state. This occurred because the sol cured; however, the shells being essentially free from wax never gained the strength of the samples de-waxed initially by autoclave.