Shift Work × Required Skills: Understanding Quality Standards

29 jobs found.

Flaw (Kizu) Removal Inspector (Textile Manufacturing)

In the textile manufacturing process, this occupation involves visually inspecting products for flaws and defects and removing defective products.

Fish Sorter

Fish sorters grade and remove defective products from caught fish and shellfish according to criteria such as shape, size, and freshness.

Wool Fabric Inspector

A job that inspects defects and quality of wool fabric products using visual inspection or measuring instruments, judges and records them according to standards.

Prime Mover Parts Assembler

This occupation involves assembling parts of prime movers (such as engines and motors) according to drawings and procedures, and producing products that meet quality standards.

Doubling Yarn Inspector

This occupation involves inspecting the finishing condition of doubling yarn visually or by measurement, sorting and reporting defective or non-standard products.

Paper Container Inspector

A job that inspects the appearance, dimensions, strength, etc., of paper containers (such as cardboard boxes and pulp molded products) according to standards and confirms quality.

Seafood Sorter

A job that sorts and classifies caught or primary processed fish and shellfish by grade, size, and quality using visual inspection or dedicated machines.

Fresh Produce Sorting Worker

Fresh produce sorting workers inspect and sort vegetables and fruits, selecting those that meet quality standards.

Fruit Sorting Worker (Canned Food Manufacturing)

This occupation involves sorting fruits used in canned food factories by quality, ripeness, presence of damage, etc., using visual inspection or machines to supply raw materials suitable for productization.

Sorting Worker (Glass Manufacturing)

This occupation involves using visual inspection or inspection devices to check glass products for defects in appearance and sorting/removing products that do not meet standards.