3-Station vs 4-Station vs 6-Station: Which ISBM Machine Fits Your Production?

Choosing the wrong station count means either overpaying for capacity you don’t need, or bottlenecking a line you can’t expand. This guide breaks down the engineering logic, performance data, and cost trade-offs so you can select with confidence.

Quick-Decision Guide: Choose Your Configuration

Each station count is built on the same HGY full servo-driven architecture — sharing common control systems, mold interfaces, and service infrastructure.

ENTRY / FLEXIBLE 3S

3–Station ISBM

HGY50-V3-EV  |  Full Servo

Inject Stretch-Blow Eject
Thermal ConditioningResidual heat only
Wall Thickness Control±8–10%
Output (single cavity)800–1,200 pcs/hr
Typical Cycle Time10–14 sec
Mold Changeover~60 min
Tooling CostLowest (~25% less)

BEST FOR

Wide-mouth jars, simple cylindrical bottles, startup and small-batch production, product R&D sampling, and applications where capital efficiency outweighs surface precision.

View 3-Station Models
HIGH PERFORMANCE 6S

6–Station ISBM

EP-HGYS280-V6  |  Full Servo

Inject Cond 1 Cond 2 Blow 1 Blow 2 Eject
Thermal Conditioning2 dedicated zones
Wall Thickness Control±3–5%
Output (single cavity)1,500–3,000+ pcs/hr
Typical Cycle Time6–10 sec
Mold Changeover90–120 min
Throughput Advantage+35–50% vs 4-Station

BEST FOR

High-volume beverage lines, complex asymmetric cosmetic bottles, multi-layer designs, and production environments where per-unit cost and maximum uptime are the primary optimization targets.

View 6-Station Models

Side-by-Side Technical Comparison

Every specification that matters for your purchasing decision, in one table.

Feature / Criteria 3-Station 4-Station 6-Station
Dedicated Conditioning Station × None (residual heat) 1 zone (8–12 heaters) ✓✓ 2 zones
Servo Tail Trimming × Not standard Integrated Integrated
Wall Thickness Uniformity ±8–10% ±5% or better ±3–5%
Neck Finish Precision Standard High (±0.05 mm) High (±0.05 mm)
Output per Cavity per Hour 800–1,200 bottles 600–1,200+ bottles 1,500–3,000+ bottles
Typical Cycle Time 10–14 sec 10–30 sec 6–10 sec
Bottle Geometry Range Wide-mouth, simple shapes Narrow-neck, complex profiles Asymmetric, multi-layer, thick-base
Maximum Bottle Volume Up to ~500 ml Up to ~5 L (model dependent) Up to ~2 L (model dependent)
Thick-Wall Capability (>5 mm) Limited Up to 15 mm Up to 15 mm
Engineering Resins (PETG, PC, Tritan) Limited (simple shapes) Full support Full support
Tooling Cost (vs 4-Station) ~25% lower Baseline ~20–30% higher
Capital Investment Level ★☆☆ Lowest ★★☆ Mid-range ★★★ Highest
Per-Bottle Production Cost Low volume: lowest | High volume: highest Balanced across volumes High volume: lowest per unit
Mold Changeover Time ~60 min 60–90 min 90–120 min
Machine Footprint Most compact Standard Largest
Available Models (HGY Series) HGY50-V3-EV HGYS150 / HGYS200 / HGY250 / HGY650 (7 variants) EP-HGYS280-V6

Quick-Decision Guide: Choose Your Configuration

Match your production scenario to the right station count.

Choose 3-Station When…

  •  Daily output target is under 10,000 bottles per shift
  • Bottle design is a simple cylindrical or wide-mouth shape
  • Primary material is standard PET with wall thickness under 3 mm
  • Capital budget is the primary constraint
  • You need fast mold changes for small-batch or multi-SKU production
  • You are prototyping or market-testing new bottle designs

Choose 4-Station When…

  • Bottle design has narrow neck, thick walls, or complex geometry
  •  Material is PETG, PC, Tritan, or other engineering resins
  • Application requires pharmaceutical or cosmetic-grade surface quality
  • Daily output is 5,000–20,000 bottles per shift
  •  You need ±5% wall thickness consistency or better
  • Servo tail trimming is required (clean bottle base finish)

Choose 6-Station When…

  • Daily output target exceeds 20,000 bottles per shift
  • Per-bottle energy and labor cost must be minimized
  • Bottle features asymmetric profiles, heavy bases, or multi-layer walls
  • Extended cooling is needed for thick-wall stability (>10 mm)
  • You operate 24/7 production with maximum uptime priority
  • Per-unit ROI outweighs initial capital investment

Understanding ROI Across Station Configurations

A higher-station machine costs more upfront — but the real comparison is total cost of ownership over 3–5 years. When you factor in energy savings, labor efficiency, material yield, and throughput gains, the payback timeline often shortens dramatically.

Example scenario: A 6-station machine producing 25,000 bottles per day at 6-second cycle time consumes approximately 35% less energy per bottle than a 4-station system running the same volume at 12-second cycle time. Combined with the reduction in operator interventions and higher material yield, the incremental capital investment typically recovers within 12–18 months.

The math changes based on your specific production volume, shift schedule, local energy cost, and bottle weight. That’s why we provide customized ROI projections — not generic estimates — for every configuration inquiry.

30–50%

Energy savings (servo vs hydraulic)

12–18mo

Typical payback at >20K bottles/day

~25%

Lower tooling cost (3-station vs 4-station)

35–50%

Higher output (6-station vs 4-station)

95%+

Material yield (inline scrap recovery)

15–25%

Material weight reduction (ISBM vs EBM)

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All HGY Series Models at a Glance

Nine production-ready ISBM machines spanning compact servo to heavy-duty industrial — all CE and ISO certified.

Model Station Drive Injection Force Typical Application Link
HGY50-V3-EV 3-Station Full Servo 50 kN Small bottles, sampling, wide-mouth View →
HGYS150-V4 4-Station Servo Pump 150 kN Standard cosmetic & pharma bottles View →
HGYS150-V4 EV 4-Station Full Servo 150 kN High-efficiency PET bottles View →
HGYS200-V4 4-Station Servo Pump 200 kN PET & PETG cosmetic containers View →
HGYS200-V4-B 4-Station Servo Pump 200 kN PET/PETG bottle production View →
HGY250-V4 4-Station Servo 250 kN Beverage, cosmetic & pharma View →
HGY250-V4-B 4-Station Servo 250 kN High-precision cosmetic & beverage View →
EP-HGY650-V4 4-Station Servo 650 kN Large-format containers, up to 5 L+ View →
EP-HGYS280-V6 6-Station Full Servo 280 kN High-volume, complex geometry View →
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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main difference between 3-station and 4-station ISBM machines?

The key difference is thermal conditioning. A 3-station machine relies entirely on the preform’s residual heat from injection — there is no dedicated conditioning step. A 4-station machine adds a separate temperature conditioning station with zoned heating between injection and stretch-blow, allowing precise thermal profiling. This gives the 4-station design better wall thickness control (±5% vs ±8–10%), compatibility with complex bottle geometries, and the ability to process engineering resins such as PETG, PC, and Tritan.

When should I choose a 6-station ISBM machine over a 4-station?

A 6-station configuration is recommended when you need maximum throughput (1,500–3,000+ bottles per hour per cavity) or extreme wall thickness precision (±3–5%). The two additional stations provide extended conditioning zones and a dedicated cooling station, shortening effective cycle time by 35–50% compared to 4-station systems. Choose 6-station if your daily target exceeds 20,000 bottles per shift, or if your bottle design features asymmetric profiles requiring prolonged thermal conditioning.

Is a 3-station ISBM machine sufficient for my production needs?

A 3-station machine is an excellent fit for wide-mouth containers, simple cylindrical bottles, or lower daily volumes (under 10,000 bottles per shift). It offers the lowest capital investment, the smallest footprint, and approximately 25% lower tooling cost than 4-station systems. However, it is not recommended for narrow-neck bottles, thick-wall cosmetic containers, or applications requiring tight wall thickness uniformity, since it lacks a dedicated conditioning station.

How do I calculate ROI when comparing different station configurations?

ROI calculation should account for five cost factors: (1) capital equipment cost, (2) mold and tooling investment, (3) energy consumption per bottle, (4) labor cost per shift, and (5) material waste rate. Higher-station machines cost more upfront but typically deliver lower per-bottle production costs at higher volumes. For example, a 6-station machine with 35% faster cycle time can offset its higher capital cost within 12–18 months at production volumes above 20,000 bottles per day. Contact our team with your production targets for a customized ROI projection.

How long does a mold changeover take on HGY series machines?

On current-generation HGY series machines with servo-driven systems and digital parameter recall, mold changeovers typically take 60–120 minutes depending on the station count and mold complexity. 3-station machines are generally fastest (fewer mold components), while 6-station machines require more time due to additional conditioning and cooling tooling. Operators can pre-load parameters for recurring molds, reducing subsequent changeovers significantly.

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