High-temperature furnace operation × Strengths: Attention to Detail & Accuracy

For Those Strong in Attention to Detail & Accuracy

This collection features jobs that may suit those who are relatively comfortable paying attention to details and working accurately.

Situations requiring accuracy exist in many jobs, but their degree and nature vary. Some situations demand numerical accuracy, while others require precision in language or movement. While pursuing perfection is important, discerning the appropriate level of accuracy for each situation is also a valuable skill.

The jobs introduced here tend to offer more opportunities to utilize attention to detail and accuracy. Explore where your thoroughness can create value.

8 jobs found.

Glass Melting Furnace Worker (Ceramics Raw Materials)

This occupation manufactures glass frit and melts used as ceramics raw materials in high-temperature furnaces, handling everything from raw material blending, temperature control, cooling, and inspection.

Raw Material Roasting Worker (Carbon Products Manufacturing)

Job involving the firing of raw materials for carbon products in high-temperature furnaces to improve physical properties.

Graphite Product Manufacturing Worker

Manufacturing technician who handles raw material mixing, forming, sintering, machining, and quality inspection for graphite (graphite) products.

Amalgamation Smelter (Gold Smelting)

A type of non-ferrous metal smelting where mercury is mixed with gold ore to form amalgam, and mercury is removed by heating and evaporation to recover gold.

Firing worker (carbon product manufacturing)

A job that fires raw materials for carbon products at high temperatures to improve the physical properties of the products.

Silicon Refiner (Metallic Silicon)

Specialized occupation that refines silicon (metallic silicon) through reduction smelting in a high-temperature electric furnace and adjusts it to a purity suitable for industrial use.

Copper Smelter

A profession that melts and refines copper ore at high temperatures to manufacture copper ingots and refined copper.

Metallurgist (Non-Ferrous Metal Smelting)

A job that manufactures high-purity metal ingots by melting, reducing, and electrolytically decomposing raw materials of non-ferrous metals (such as aluminum, copper, lead, and zinc).