Standing work × Classification Details: Manufacturing, Repair, Painting, and Drafting Occupations

1102 jobs found.

Hydraulic Worker (Forging Press)

This occupation involves forging metal materials by heating and compressing them using a hydraulic press to achieve predetermined shapes.

Organic chemical manufacturing worker

Technical job that industrially controls synthesis reactions of organic compounds for mass production. Handles raw material charging, reaction management, separation, and purification.

Glaze Formulator

A profession that formulates glazes used in the pottery and porcelain manufacturing process and manages the mixing ratios and quality of raw materials.

Oil Formulation Worker (Pharmaceutical Manufacturing)

The oil formulation worker is a job that performs compounding, manufacturing, and quality control of liquid pharmaceutical preparations (suspensions, syrups, injections, etc.). Handles weighing, dissolution, mixing, filtration, aseptic filling, etc., and follows strict procedures based on GMP.

Oil and Fat Bottling Worker (Chemical Industry)

Oil and fat bottling workers in the chemical industry handle a series of production processes from blending oil and fat products to filling, packaging, and quality control.

Dissolving Operator (Chemical Product Manufacturing)

A job that dissolves chemical raw materials in melting furnaces and supplies them to the product manufacturing process. Involves high-temperature work, safety management, and quality control.

Melting Worker (Chemical Fiber Manufacturing)

This occupation involves operating the melting of raw resin at high temperatures in chemical fiber manufacturing lines and supplying it to extrusion and spinning processes.

Melting Operator (Raw Plastic Processing)

A manufacturing operator who heats and melts plastic raw materials, manages temperature and quality for supply to molding machines.

Ceramic Decorator Apprentice

Apprentice occupation to acquire painting techniques on porcelain or pottery.

Ceramic and Stone Product Inspector

Ceramic and stone product inspectors inspect the appearance, dimensions, and physical properties of products such as porcelain, tiles, and bricks on the production line and sort out defective products.