Positional shuffling aside, the Hurricanes are putting the onus on the forwards to deliver at set-piece time.
While Boyd said earlier in the week the set-piece stats against the Crusaders last weekend were not as dire as first thought - a surprising declaration - the Hurricanes have been drilling their lineouts, both attacking and defensive, with forwards coach Richard Watt.
The Cheetahs scored several tries off lineout drives in their 50-32 loss to the Blues, and appeal as a team willing to chance their arm, especially as they could well be exiting the competition as one of the two South African franchises in proposed cuts.
The Hurricanes are also not averse to innovation, and even threw Jordie Barrett up at No2 on a 5m lineout against the Crusaders.
He's tall and not too hefty to lift, so that idea was not as outlandish as it may have seemed.
But they would settle for a steady supply of ball as they seek a bonus point victory against the Cheetahs. More importantly, they seek a slicker performance after several weeks of inconsistency.
"We've put a fair bit of time into the bits that failed last weekend, and there were a few. The Cheetahs are a very, very good attacking side," Boyd said. "They can score tries and have averaged 31 points against New Zealand sides. Of all the South African sides, they play closest to the Kiwi sides."