Wood, Pulp, and Paper Product Inspection Workers X Career Path: Leader

14 matching jobs found.

Paperboard Inspector

This occupation involves inspecting the thickness, basis weight, strength, and surface quality of products on paperboard production lines such as cardboard linerboard, confirming compliance with standards, and recording results.

Processed Paper Inspector

A job that inspects the appearance, dimensions, physical properties, etc., of processed paper and ships products that meet standards and quality criteria.

Paper Products Inspector

A profession that inspects the appearance, dimensions, strength, etc., of paper and pulp products to confirm compliance with standards and quality criteria.

Paper Sorter

This occupation involves visually inspecting and sorting paper products for defects such as scratches, dirt, and foreign matter in paper mills or paper processing factories, and removing defective products.

Wood Base Sorting Inspector

This occupation involves inspecting and sorting the appearance, dimensions, and defects of sawn wood blanks in the wood product manufacturing process to confirm compliance with quality standards.

Willow Product Inspector

A profession that inspects whether the quality of wood products and paper products in the manufacturing process meets the standards.

Plywood Inspector

This occupation involves inspecting the quality of raw materials to the dimensions, appearance, strength, etc., of finished products in the plywood manufacturing process to confirm compliance with standards.

Paper Container Inspector

A job that inspects the appearance, dimensions, strength, etc., of paper containers (such as cardboard boxes and pulp molded products) according to standards and confirms quality.

Bamboo Products Inspector

A profession that conducts quality inspections on appearance, dimensions, strength, etc., in the manufacturing process of bamboo products and selects products that meet the standards.

Barrel Repairer (Empty Barrel Inspection and Repair)

This occupation involves visually inspecting and leak-testing empty wooden barrels to check quality, repairing cracks or distortions, replacing fittings, and restoring them to a reusable condition.