Engineering & Manufacturing × Classification Details: Product Manufacturing and Processing Workers (Excluding Metal and Food Products)
4142 matching jobs found.
Ceramic Artificial Gemstone Manufacturing Worker
Technical occupation that uses ceramic raw materials to compound, form, fire, polish, and inspect artificial gemstones such as ruby, sapphire, and cubic zirconia.
Ceramic Biomedical Parts Manufacturing Worker
This occupation involves manufacturing ceramic biomedical parts used in medical or dental implants, from raw material blending to forming, sintering, processing, and inspection.
Ceramic Cutting Tool Manufacturing Worker
A job that manufactures cutting tools using ceramic materials. Responsible for processes from raw material blending to forming, firing, and grinding.
Ceramic Electronic Parts Manufacturing Worker
A job that forms and fires ceramic powder to manufacture substrates and capacitors, etc., which serve as materials for electronic components.
Ceramic Dental and Bone Manufacturing Worker
A job that manufactures dentures and bone grafts by forming, sintering, and processing ceramic artificial teeth for dentistry and medical bone fillers from raw materials.
Ceramic Product Grinding Worker
A manufacturing worker who uses grinding machines and grinding stones to shape, dimension, and finish the surface of ceramic products.
Cellophane Tape Manufacturing Worker
Manufacturing job involving applying adhesive to cellophane film, drying, slitting, winding, and packaging processes through machine operation and quality control.
Cellophane Manufacturing Worker
This occupation manufactures transparent cellophane film using cellulose as the raw material. Responsible for processes such as dissolution, forming, stretching, drying, finishing, and winding.
Fiber Reinforced Plastic Molding Worker
Occupation of manufacturing fiber-reinforced plastic (FRP) products. Laminates glass fiber or carbon fiber with resin, and molds and cures it using a mold to produce products.
Textile Product Finisher
Textile Product Finishers perform dyeing, finishing processes, inspection, and packaging on fabrics produced by weaving or knitting, ensuring the quality and appearance of the products.