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Other Assemblers and Inspectors  (NOC 9498)
Northwest Region
Description |  Titles |  Duties |   Related Occupations

This unit group includes assemblers and inspectors, not elsewhere classified, who assemble and inspect a variety of products, such as jewellery, silverware, clocks and watches, musical instruments, sporting goods, toys, and other miscellaneous products. They are employed by a wide variety of manufacturing companies.

Venetian blind assembler, antenna assembler, bicycle assembler, camera assembly inspector, eyeglass frame assembler, golf club assembler, jewellery inspector, lampshade assembler, piano assembly inspector, toy inspector, watch assembler.

Assemblers in this unit group perform some or all of the following duties:
  • Cut, shape and fit materials to form parts and components
  • Screw, clip, glue, bond, weld or otherwise assemble parts and components to form final products
  • Sand, trim, grind or clean products into final form using hand tools.
Inspectors in this unit group perform some or all of the following duties:
  • Check manufactured items for defects and for conformance to specifications, visually or using sample models and instruments
  • Affix seals or tags to approved items and return defective products for repair or recycle
  • Complete reports on product inspection.
Included Cities in Region | Service Canada Offices

Thunder Bay, Dryden, Kenora, Fort Frances, Geraldton, Greenstone, Keewatin, Longlac, Marathon

View a list of Service Canada offices in this area.

Jobs for Other Assemblers and Inspectors in Northwest Region

Job opportunities from Job Bank and contributing job sites are updated daily.

There are 1 job postings in Northwest Region.

Table of job opportunities for your chosen occupation at the regional level.
Date Posted Job Title Employer Location Source
2013-05-23 Assembler, bicycles (Bike Assembler) Canadian Tire
  • Thunder Bay
Job Bank Job Bank

Where to look for job opportunities

Job postings can be found in many places: on the Internet, on community bulletin boards, at job fairs or in newspaper help wanted sections.

Information about available work is often circulated through managers, employees and business associates, as well as through family, friends and acquaintances. Networking Link opens in a new window is one of the best ways to search for jobs.

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