Patient × Career Path: Quality Inspector

38 jobs found.

Aeronautical Equipment (Parachute) Manufacturing Worker

A job that involves cutting, sewing, assembling, and inspecting parachutes using synthetic fibers to produce products with high precision.

Seamless Shirt Finisher

A job that handles finishing tasks such as inspection, shaping, thread processing, and pressing of shirt products knitted using seamless technology.

Bicycle Assembler

A manufacturing job that assembles bicycle parts, adjusts and inspects them, and ensures the quality of the finished product.

Woven Fabric Knot Remover

Woven fabric knot removal workers visually inspect and remove knots (knots or defects in the weave) in woven fabric products during the manufacturing process of textile products, maintaining high-quality textile products as specialists.

Pearl Processing and Sorting Worker

Pearl processing and sorting workers apply processes such as polishing, drilling, and degreasing to cultured pearls, and sort and grade them based on quality standards such as color, shape, size, and luster. They ensure product quality and supply materials to the jewelry manufacturing process.

Quartz Watch Movement Assembler

Specialized profession that assembles, adjusts, and inspects parts of quartz watch movements (the mechanical heart) using crystal oscillators.

Sand Shakeout Worker (Foundry Manufacturing)

Manufacturing work that removes sand molds and cores from castings formed by sand casting and performs finishing such as deburring.

Theodolite Assembler

Theodolite assemblers are manufacturing technicians who assemble parts of theodolites, which are optical instruments for surveying, and perform adjustments and calibrations.

Soap Sorter

A job that involves visually inspecting the appearance, shape, color variations, etc., of soap products on the manufacturing line and sorting/removing non-standard products.

Mainspring Assembler (Watch Manufacturing)

A manufacturing occupation that precisely assembles minute parts such as the mainspring spring, the heart of the watch movement, using precision tools.