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Consider a Quality Assurance Career as a QC Engineer
Job Description
The "Technical Inspector" and "Product Integrity Specialist" of the manufacturing process is the Quality Control (QC) Engineer. Your main responsibility is to conduct thorough physical testing and inspections to make sure that all raw materials, in-process parts, and completed goods closely follow engineering drawings and quality requirements. As the "Final Gatekeeper," you stop faulty goods from getting to the consumer. A highly perceptive professional with a "Zero-Tolerance" for mistakes who can use precise tools to verify manufacturing correctness in a hectic setting is the ideal choice.
Responsibilities
Inspection and Testing: Use both automated and manual tools to perform functional and dimensional inspections of parts.
Non-Conformance Management: Determine, mark, and separate faulty materials; start Non-Conformance Reports (NCR); oversee the Material Review Board (MRB) procedure.
In-Process Monitoring: To make sure that equipment are operating within specified quality criteria, conduct routine "patrol inspections" on the shop floor.
Material Validation: Before releasing arriving raw materials to production, check them against purchase order requirements and Mill Test Reports (MTR).
Documentation & Traceability: For each batch produced, keep thorough inspection logs, certificates of compliance, and traceability records.
Gauge Calibration: To guarantee the dependability of measurement systems, regularly verify and calibrate shop-floor measuring instruments.
Standard Operating Procedures (SOP): Create and maintain inspection checklists and work instructions for operators and junior inspectors.
Skills:
Measurement Precision: Proficiency with hand instruments such as micrometers, bore gauges, height gauges, and vernier calipers.
Technical literacy is the extraordinary capacity to decipher intricate GD&T (Geometric Dimensioning and Tolerancing) symbols and engineering drawings.
Testing Procedures: Knowledge of NDT (Non-Destructive Testing) techniques, such as dye penetrant, magnetic particle, or ultrasonic testing, as appropriate.
Making decisions: The assurance to stop production lines in the event that quality standards are not met.
Data entry: The ability to record inspection data into quality management software or ERP systems (SAP, Oracle).
The capacity to identify little surface flaws, burrs, or dimensional variations that others might overlook is known as attention to detail.
We invite you to apply and explore this exciting opportunity!
Warm Regards,
HR - Maria
88708 33430
infohrmaria04@gmail.com »
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