1. Education and major
· Education: Middle school graduate or higher.
· Major: Preference will be given to applicants with a related major, such as automobile manufacturing or mechanical assembly. Some companies give preference to applicants with a vocational school degree.
2. Technical requirements
· Must be familiar with automotive part names and assembly processes, and be able to understand simple assembly drawings and process documents.
· Familiarity with the use of general assembly tools (wrench, screwdriver, torque wrench, etc.).
· Possess basic quality awareness and be able to identify defective products during the assembly process.
3. Physical condition
· Adaptable to production line operating speeds, some jobs require standing for long periods of time, bending, or carrying lightweight parts.
· No major illnesses, good eyesight (no color blindness/color weakness), able to identify differences in component specifications and appearance.
4. Professional qualifications
· Comply with workplace safety regulations and obey the foreman's work assignments.
· Excellent teamwork skills, able to collaborate with upstream and downstream departments on the production line to achieve production goals.
· Strong sense of responsibility, attention to detail in assembly to ensure quality.
5. Career Requirements
· New or inexperienced applicants are welcome to apply. Preference will be given to those with automotive assembly experience (at least two years of experience).
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Job Description
1. Prepare the parts
· Receive required automobile parts according to production work instructions and confirm the model, specifications, and quantity of the parts.
· Inspection of the appearance of parts and removal of damaged or unsatisfactory parts.
2. Assembly work
· Perform designated assembly processes (e.g., installation of doors, seats, instrument panels, tires, engine parts, etc.) at production line work sites according to assembly process instruction requirements.
· Perform fastening and connecting work using dedicated tools, ensuring that the assembly position and torque of parts meet the standards.
3. Self-inspection and cross-inspection of quality
· After assembly is complete, we conduct our own inspection according to quality standards to check the gap between parts and the strength of connections.
· Cooperate with the quality inspector's sample inspection and promptly correct any assembly problems discovered to prevent defective products from flowing into the next process.
4. Maintenance of equipment and work sites
· Responsible for maintaining assembly tools and equipment in the workplace, performing regular cleaning and inspections, and promptly reporting any damage to tools or equipment failures.
· Maintain cleanliness of the workplace and surrounding areas, and implement 5S management at the production site.
5. Records and Reports
· Create production assembly records, record assembly quantity for each shift, pass quantity, rework status, etc.
· Report to the foreman any quality issues with parts or unreasonable processes that arise during the assembly process and suggest improvements.