Forming × Recommended Skills: Safety and Health Management

23 jobs found.

Abrasive Material Manufacturing Worker

A manufacturing technician who handles raw material mixing for abrasive materials, forming, firing, finishing polishing, inspection, and packaging.

Chamotte Manufacturer

Chamotte manufacturers produce chamotte, a type of refractory material. They blend raw materials such as fire clay, form them, dry them, and fire them at high temperatures to create materials for refractory bricks and lining materials.

White Brick Manufacturer

A job that manufactures white bricks using stone-based raw materials. Responsible for the entire process from raw material mixing to forming, drying, firing, and inspection.

Plate Maker (Glass Product Manufacturing)

A profession that mixes glass raw materials, melts them in a high-temperature furnace, forms flat-plate glass using the float method or draw-down method, and performs cutting, polishing, and inspection.

Bottlemaker (Glass Product Manufacturing)

A profession that manufactures glass products such as bottles by mixing glass raw materials, melting them in a melting furnace, and then going through the processes of forming, firing, cooling, and inspection.

Log Carriage Handle Worker

Artisan who processes, assembles, and finishes wooden handles for log carriages based on design drawings.

Tile Manufacturing Worker (Ceramic Product Manufacturing)

A profession that manufactures tiles for architecture and interiors through processes from forming to glazing and firing, using clay as raw material.

Teppo Kiln Worker (Brick Manufacturing)

A profession that forms clay and manufactures bricks by drying and firing them in a kiln called a teppo kiln.

Stone Products Manufacturing Worker

Skilled trade manufacturing stone products such as blocks, bricks, tiles, and sanitary ceramics using stone and earth materials as raw materials.

Clay Manufacturer

A job that manufactures earthen products such as bricks, tiles, and pottery by mixing and forming raw materials like clay, followed by drying and firing processes.