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Sub-six-hour job change in container glass: what it actually takes

SMED adapted for container glass — how to get from 14–18 hour changeovers to a choreographed six-hour dance without sacrificing first-hour yield.

23 April 2026 8 min readLean Glass
Glass bottles on a production line machine

Why this matters

Every hour of job change is an hour of lost production, and a poorly-executed changeover costs double — time during, plus scrap after. In most plants we visit, changeovers take 14–18 hours. The best run under six. That gap — eight to twelve hours per changeover, forty to eighty times a year per line — is usually the single largest pool of accessible productivity in the plant.

SMED, adapted for glass

Single-Minute Exchange of Die comes from stamping, not glass. Direct application does not survive first contact with a forming machine. But the core disciplines translate:

  • Separate internal from external work. What must happen while the machine is down, versus what can happen while it is still running?
  • Convert internal to external where possible. Mould prep, blank staging, forehearth setpoint reviews — all external if you pre-stage them.
  • Streamline whatever remains internal. Parallel activity, choreographed sequencing, standard tool positions.

The choreography

A six-hour changeover is not one team racing. It is three to five roles running in parallel, handing off at specific moments, with a shared timeline everyone can see. We map it like a recipe:

  1. T-60 to T-0 (running): External prep — moulds staged, blanks prepped, forehearth setpoints pre-calculated, crew briefed.
  2. T0 to T+30 (shutdown): Controlled ramp-down, section isolation, heat-up cycle started for incoming moulds.
  3. T+30 to T+180: Parallel execution — mould swap, blank swap, forehearth re-tune, inspection setup reconfigured.
  4. T+180 to T+300: Restart ramp, first gob, first-hour yield monitoring.
  5. T+300 to T+360: Stabilisation and handover to production.

First-hour yield: the forgotten KPI

A fast changeover that produces scrap is not a win. We treat first-hour yield with the same discipline as minutes-to-complete. Two habits stick the most:

  • First-hour target on the huddle board. If the crew cannot see it, they cannot own it.
  • Defect coding in the first 20 minutes. Most defects after a changeover fall into 3–4 categories. Code them, track them, pareto them — you fix a different changeover each time.

The changeover standard that lasts

A bound PDF of the standard is dead on arrival. What lasts:

  • A one-page visual timeline in the control room and the forming corridor.
  • Role cards laminated at each station — two or three bullets per role per phase.
  • A digital version (we build one; it is our Job Change Tool) that progresses live with the actual changeover.

Where to start

Do not start with the standard. Start with a video study of two or three changeovers. The improvement opportunities will name themselves. Draft a standard. Pilot it once. Adjust. Pilot it again. Only when you have two clean runs do you codify it — and even then, every crew's first run is a learning, not a failure.

What a typical engagement looks like

A typical changeover engagement runs 8–14 weeks: two weeks of video study and analysis, two weeks of standard drafting with the crews, six to ten weeks of piloted execution and iteration. By week 14, the plant has a written standard, a dashboard, and at least ten changeovers at the new target.

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