Social Sciences, asked by khushi998823, 4 months ago

How is the life of thrown out factory​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

☆VALID ANSWER☆

It is very hard and physical.

I clock in, go to the bathroom and then go to my machines to get my briefing. I find out what parts we are running, what problems the previous operator has experienced and how the machine is running. I then audit all paperwork including the purge book, QVA, material sheet, stock sheet and the packaging instructions. I make sure everything is in check on both my machines before running my test parts. I operate and setup a Mectron inspection machine. I run my test parts and make sure they all fail, then I turn the machine on.

I package boxes of conforming parts that weigh up to standard and put them onto a pallet. I run my test parts every hour and log them into the computer as boundary samples. If there is a problem, I go and reprogram the machine.

When I do a setup, I clean the machine, set the rails, change the wheel and program the part into the mectron computer. I program for the M1900, length, thread diameter, flange diameter, hex diameter, threads, profile to detect bent parts, and the level if there is a washer to detect the presence of one. I might program to detect the shoulder, collar, knurl or upper dog.

When I finish a pallet I back report it and move it via a bungenheinrich pallet lift to the loading zone. I make sure my handling unit is signed and verified by another operator and that my labels are on all boxes.

My job involves lifting of 30–50lb boxes, 27 on a pallet, for 8 hours. I must label each box and palletize it properly. Some fun aspects of my job include talking to coworkers and the supervisor and seeing how many parts I can run in a night. My record is 107,000 parts in an 8 hours shift for both machines. Our target is 70,000 every night.

I make sure everything is in check, clean my area, audit my paperwork again, run my test pieces, and clock out. I do this 7 days a week for 8–14 hours depending on demand for production. I typically work over 60 hours a week. I make very good money though, and I wouldn't trade my job for anything in the world. I love my job and the people I work with. Working in a factory is extremely rewarding.

HOPE YOU'RE SATISFIED WITH MY ANSWER

Answered by spring28blossoms
2

Answer:

it is hard and has a lot of physical work involved

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