Keywords > Strength

24 jobs found.

Thread Weighing Inspector

This occupation involves measuring and inspecting the thickness, weight, tensile strength, etc., of raw fiber yarns and spun yarns in the spinning and silk reeling processes, and evaluating their quality.

Glass Annealing Worker

This occupation involves heat-treating glass products in an annealing furnace (annealing furnace) to remove internal stresses, thereby improving product strength and transparency. It plays a role in maintaining and enhancing quality through furnace temperature control and product inspection.

Drying Worker (Gypsum Products Manufacturing)

Manufacturing job responsible for the drying process after molding gypsum products, ensuring product strength and quality.

Raw Silk Inspector

Raw silk inspectors inspect the quality of raw silk as a raw material visually or using dedicated equipment, grade it, and remove defective products.

Crane Manufacturing Engineer (Excluding Production Engineers)

A technical job responsible for the manufacturing process from parts machining to assembly, adjustment, and inspection of cranes, ensuring safety and quality.

Aircraft Propeller Development Engineer

Specialized technical position responsible for the design and development of propellers used for aircraft propulsion, from prototyping, evaluation, to mass production transition.

Steel Materials Design Engineer

An engineer who designs the chemical composition and heat treatment conditions of steel materials and conducts materials development and evaluation to meet the required mechanical properties.

Synthetic Fiber Net Manufacturing Worker

A skilled trade that uses knitting machines or looms with synthetic fibers as raw materials to manufacture various net products such as fishing nets, sports nets, and civil engineering nets.

Plywood Development Engineer

Engineer who selects raw materials for plywood, develops manufacturing processes, manages quality, and evaluates product characteristics.

Cold Header Worker

Operators who use cold heading machines (cold headers) on metal wire rods to mass-produce metal parts such as screws and bolts through press forming.