Quality Control × Industry & Occupation: Engineering & Manufacturing

575 jobs found.

Laminated Sheet Bonding Worker

A profession that manufactures laminated boards by bonding plastic sheets or decorative sheets with adhesive and applying pressure and heat with a press machine to integrate them.

Segment Groove Cutter

A job that operates general metalworking machines (lathes, milling machines, etc.) to precisely cut grooves along the segment shape of parts.

Insulation Paper Manufacturing Worker

Insulation paper manufacturing workers produce paper with insulation properties for electrical equipment, handling the entire process from pulp raw materials through papermaking, processing, and inspection.

Insulated Wire Manufacturing Worker

Occupation of manufacturing insulated wires by covering copper or aluminum wires with insulators to meet specified electrical properties and dimensions.

Soap Base Receiver Worker

Worker who receives, inspects, weighs, and transports base raw materials supplied to the soap manufacturing line. Checks quality standards and ensures proper handover to the manufacturing process.

Cutting Tool Manufacturing Worker

This occupation handles the entire manufacturing process of cutting tools (drills, end mills, taps, etc.). Involves raw material selection, heat treatment, grinding, coating, inspection, and more.

Cutting Worker (Rubber Products)

A manufacturing technician who uses cutting machines and hand tools to remove excess parts from rubber products and finish them to specified shapes and dimensions.

Selenium Rectifier Manufacturing Worker

Manufacturing worker who assembles, processes, and inspects parts on the selenium rectifier production line.

Textile Machinery Assembler

Textile machinery assemblers are manufacturing technicians who assemble parts of machines used in textile production, such as spinning machines and looms, and perform installation and adjustment.

Ship Fitter

Specialized profession that installs various ship fittings such as brackets, supports, ladders, handrails, etc., on the deck and interior of ships at shipyards and the like.