Quality Inspection × Strengths: Physical Stamina & Endurance

For Those with High Physical Stamina & Endurance

This collection features jobs that may suit those who are relatively comfortable with physical work and sustaining activity for extended periods.

Physical stamina manifests in various ways. Some situations require standing for long hours, while others involve carrying heavy objects. Quick, burst movements may be needed, or endurance may be required. Additionally, mental stamina to maintain concentration for extended periods is also an important element alongside physical stamina.

The jobs introduced here tend to involve more opportunities to use your body or extended activity periods. Explore where you can utilize your stamina and endurance.

929 jobs found.

Anchor (Anchor) Manufacturing Worker

Manufacturing technician who handles the process from casting to machining, heat treatment, and inspection of anchors (anchors) for ships.

Squid Canning Worker

A manufacturing technician responsible for washing and pre-processing squid as raw material, filling with seasoning liquid for cans, sealing, heat sterilization, inspection, and packaging.

Unicycle Assembler

A manufacturing job that assembles unicycle parts and manufactures completed vehicles.

Single-Wheel Cart Assembler (Material Handling)

Assembly worker who assembles parts of material handling single-wheel carts, adjusts and inspects them, and manufactures finished products.

Thread Winding Worker (Cone Winding)

Operate machines that wind yarn into cone shapes in spinning factories, managing yarn tension and quality.

Thread Winder (Chemical Fiber Manufacturing)

Responsible for the spinning and winding processes of chemical fibers, operating spinning machines to produce synthetic fibers from raw materials.

Elastic Thread Manufacturing Worker

A job that mixes natural rubber or synthetic rubber and manufactures thin rubber threads through processes such as extrusion and vulcanization.

Thread Finishing Worker

Thread finishing workers process spun raw yarn through twisting, heat setting, oiling, and other treatments to uniform its quality and prepare it for shipment as a product.

Thread Sorting Worker

A job that involves visually or mechanically inspecting the quality of yarn in the fiber manufacturing process and removing defective yarn.

Thread Tensioning Worker (Dyeing Finishing Operations)

A job that operates dyeing and finishing machines to process dyed yarn through warping, tension adjustment, drying, and other steps while maintaining quality.