Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Different Types of Factory Jobs


Different kinds of specialized workers work in factories. The workers are placed in a role depending on their education, certification, and years of experience.

One kind of factory job is a welder. These workers set up and operate machines that heat, cut, and shape metals into place. The welder may work in a factory or similar space. Metal-refining furnace operators and tenders operate or tend furnaces, such as gas, oil, coal, electric-arc or electric induction, open-hearth or oxygen furnaces to melt and refine metal before casting or to produce specified types of steel. Pourers and casters operate hand-controlled mechanisms to pour and regulate the flow of molten metal into molds to produce castings or ingots. Welding, soldering, and brazing machine setters, operators, and tenders  set up or operate welding, soldering, or brazing machines or robots that weld, braze, solder, or heat treat metal products, components, or assemblies.

Another type of worker in a factory is a machinist. Machinists are skilled tradesmen and women who work with tools such as lathes, milling machines, and grinders to produce precision metal parts. They plan and carry out the operations needed to make machined products that meet precise specifications.

Fab shop operators set up and operate power press to trim, punch, shape, notch, draw or crimp metal components according to specifications.

General labors perform a variety of tasks including physically stacking cases on pallets, checking codes and product labels, applying labels in a sequential manner to the appropriate pallet. They collect, sort and process remelt including communication and coordination of re-melt quantities and inventories to the supervisor.

Maintenance workers perform many duties, including fixing switches, repairing motors, greasing and lubing parts, adding oil, repairing faulty wiring, and unclogging drains. They may walk the building two or three times a day searching for repairs to make. Typically the maintenance worker cleans up his own debris, sweeps the floor, and puts away his tools.

Material handlers in factories operate industrial truck equipment with lifting devices to push, pull, lift, stack, tier or move products, equipment and material in warehouse, storage yard or factory. They operate a tugger to deliver necessary parts from the warehouse to the worksite.

Manufacturing technicians ensure all processes are set up, operating and monitored in accordance with the requirements set forth by the manufacturing engineer and customer and support a smooth product transition into manufacturing. They support and perform research of customer and supplier documentation.

Assemblers assemble product, partially or completely, position parts according to knowledge of unit being assembled or follow blueprints, diagrams, layouts or oral instruction. They must be able to read build sheets and blueprints. They perform various mechanical and electrical re-op functions to correct defects identified during the assembly process and/or during test.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that projected factory employment will drop to 11.5 million workers by 2020, down from 11.9 million in January. Manufacturers' share of the labor market will likely drop to 7 percent by the end of the decade, according to the government projections.

There is an abundance of factory jobs in America. It's just a matter of finding the companies that are hiring. 

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