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Shielding Vent Manufacturer

A Complete Buyer's Guide from a Shielding Vent Manufacturer


I've been making these things long enough to know how most people shop for them. They find a size that looks right. They find a price they like. They order. And about half the time, they end up calling me a year later with problems they can't figure out.

So here's what I wish every buyer knew before they placed that first order.


Start With What You're Blocking

Before you pick a vent, figure out what frequencies you're dealing with. This sounds basic, but you'd be surprised how many people skip it.

What's inside your enclosure? Radios? Transmitters? Sensitive receivers? What's outside? Cell towers? Radar? Other equipment nearby?

The vent needs to block whatever's trying to get in and whatever's trying to get out. If you don't know the frequencies, you're guessing. And guessing usually doesn't work out.

I had a guy once who ordered standard vents for a military project. Worked fine for what he was doing. Then the next project needed to block higher frequencies. Same vent. Didn't work. He was frustrated until we figured out the frequencies had changed.


Know How Much Air You Need

The vent's job is to let heat out. If it doesn't move enough air, your equipment cooks. Simple.

You need to know your airflow number. Usually in cubic feet per minute. If you don't have that, look at your fans. The vent shouldn't be the bottleneck.

A good vent runs 80 to 90 percent open area. That means it doesn't block much flow. But open area isn't everything. Deeper cells flow less air. That's the trade-off. Better shielding usually means less airflow. You have to pick where you want to be on that scale.

I've seen people order vents with great shielding numbers but terrible airflow. Their equipment overheated. The vent was doing its shielding job fine, but the gear inside was cooking. Balance matters.


Pick Your Metal

Aluminum is what most people get. It's light. It conducts well. It's easy to work with. For indoor stuff—data centers, factory floors, telecom closets—it's perfect.

But aluminum hates salt. Put it near the ocean or anywhere they salt roads in winter, and it starts falling apart. Not right away. But a couple years in, that vent is going to look rough. And the shielding goes with it.

For those places, you want stainless. 316L. Costs more. Weighs more. But it doesn't corrode. You put it up once and forget about it.

Some people do plated aluminum. Nickel or chromate. It's a middle ground. Works okay in mild environments. Not a substitute for stainless if you're right on the coast.

If you're not sure what you need, ask. A good manufacturer will tell you.


Cells Are Where the Shielding Happens

The honeycomb cells do the work. Cell size determines what frequencies get blocked. Smaller cells block higher frequencies.

Standard 1/8-inch cells cover most telecom and industrial stuff up to a few gigahertz. If you need millimeter-wave shielding, you need smaller cells.

Depth matters too. Deeper cells block more signal. But deeper cells also block more airflow. So you have to pick.

Most standard vents use half-inch depth. Good balance. If you need more shielding, you go deeper. If airflow is tight, you might go shallower.

This is one of those things where experience matters. A manufacturer who's been doing this a while knows what works for what application.


The Gasket Is Not an Afterthought

This is where a lot of cheap vents fall apart.

The honeycomb can be perfect. But if the gasket between the vent and your enclosure doesn't seal, you've got a leak. Doesn't matter how good the rest of it is.

Foam gaskets are cheap. They also take a set. You bolt them down, they compress, everything looks fine. A year later, that foam has hardened. It doesn't spring back anymore. Now there's a gap. A small gap, but at high frequencies, small gaps leak like crazy.

We use silicone for weather seals. Stays flexible. Doesn't take a permanent set. For EMI seals, we use conductive gaskets—silver-filled silicone or beryllium copper fingers. They're designed to maintain contact over years of use.

If a vent doesn't come with a good gasket, keep looking.


Installation Kills More Vents Than Anything Else

I've seen perfectly good vents fail because someone installed them wrong.

Over-tighten the bolts and you warp the frame. Under-tighten and the gasket doesn't compress enough. Both give you leaks.

Mixing metals is another one. Stainless vent on an aluminum enclosure without isolation? That's a battery. The aluminum corrodes around the bolt holes. A year later, the vent is loose and nobody knows why.

We give customers torque specs for a reason. Use them. Don't guess.


Testing Separates the Good From the Bad

Some manufacturers test their vents. Some don't.

The ones who don't figure the math is right, so the vent works. And usually it does. But materials vary. Tools wear. Process drifts. Without testing, you don't know when something went sideways.

We test every batch. Pull a sample and peel it apart to check the brazing. Run samples on a spectrum analyzer across the frequency range. Put them through salt spray and thermal cycles.

It takes time. It adds cost. It also means we know what we're shipping.


About That Low Price

I get it. Everyone wants a good price. But there's a reason some vents cost half what others do.

Maybe the material is thinner. Maybe the brazing is spotty. Maybe the gasket is foam that fails in a year. Maybe they don't test. Maybe the cell size is wrong for your frequencies.

I'm not saying buy the most expensive vent you can find. I'm saying understand what you're getting. A vent that costs half as much but fails in two years isn't a bargain. You'll buy it twice. Or you'll spend weeks chasing problems that started with a vent that wasn't right from the beginning.

I've watched this happen more times than I can count. Customers try the cheap ones. Then they come to us. They always say the same thing: "I should have just called you first."


Lead Times

Standard vents? We can usually ship those in a week or two. Custom shapes? That takes longer. Tooling has to be built. Process has to be dialed in.

A good manufacturer will tell you up front. Not "about four weeks." A real number. If they're vague, that's a red flag.


Write It Down

Specs. Drawings. Test results. Torque specs. Lead time. Price.

Get it all in writing. Not because you don't trust the manufacturer. Because when something goes wrong—and eventually something always goes wrong—you want to know what you agreed to.

A manufacturer who won't put things in writing? That's another red flag.

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EMI ventilation window

High Shielding Ventilation Window vs. Ordinary Vents


I've watched people make this mistake more times than I can count. They need to cool an enclosure. They also need to keep RF where it belongs. So they cut a hole and cover it with whatever mesh they find at the hardware store. Figure it's good enough.

It's not.

Here's what separates a high shielding ventilation window from the ordinary stuff.


The Hardware Store Trap

Regular vents are made to let air through. That's it. Wire mesh, perforated sheet, stamped grille—they all do the same thing. Keep bugs out. Let air move.

They don't shield. Not really.

At low frequencies, a piece of metal mesh blocks some signal. But crank the frequency up into the gigahertz range, and that mesh might as well not be there. Openings are too big. Material is too thin. Signals go right through.

I've seen guys spend good money on shielding for their enclosure—conductive gaskets, filtered connectors, the works—then cover the cooling vent with window screen from the hardware store. They put a spectrum analyzer on it and wonder why their numbers tanked. The vent was the hole they forgot about.


What a High Shielding Vent Does Differently

A high shielding ventilation window isn't just mesh. It's a waveguide structure.

The idea is called waveguide below cutoff. Fancy way of saying the holes are sized and shaped so signals can't get through. Air flows fine. But electromagnetic waves above a certain frequency hit the cell walls, bounce around, and lose their energy before they make it out.

The cell size determines the cutoff frequency. Smaller cells raise the cutoff. Deeper cells increase the attenuation. Get the combination right and you get shielding that holds up into the gigahertz range—60 dB, 80 dB, sometimes more.

Ordinary vents don't have that. They're just holes. No depth. No waveguide effect. No real shielding above a few hundred megahertz.


You Can See the Difference

Look at an ordinary vent and a high shielding vent side by side.

The ordinary vent is thin. Mesh is a single layer of wire. Perforated sheet is just that—a sheet with holes punched through. No depth.

The high shielding vent has thickness. You're looking into a honeycomb structure. Cells go deep into the vent. That depth creates the waveguide effect. Without it, you don't get the cutoff.

I've had people ask me why our vents are thicker than the cheap ones. That's why. The thickness is doing the work.


Material Tells a Story

Ordinary vents use whatever metal is cheap. Steel mesh. Aluminum screen. Sometimes plastic coated, which is even worse for shielding.

High shielding vents use materials chosen for conductivity and durability. Aluminum for most jobs. Stainless for marine or coastal environments. The metal is part of the shield. It has to conduct well and hold up.

The connection matters too. Ordinary vents screw onto the enclosure through painted surfaces. No continuous electrical path. A high shielding vent comes with a conductive gasket. The gasket compresses between the vent and the enclosure, filling gaps and maintaining the shield.

Without that connection, even the best vent leaks. The gasket isn't an option. It's part of the design.


The Numbers Don't Lie

I've tested both on a spectrum analyzer. The difference is stark.

An ordinary vent—say, a piece of 1/8-inch wire mesh—might give you 10 or 15 dB of shielding at 1 GHz. At 5 GHz? Forget it. Signal goes right through.

A high shielding vent with the right cell size and depth gives you 60 dB at 1 GHz. That's a million times less signal getting through. At 5 GHz, it's still doing its job if the design is right for those frequencies.

That's the difference between passing certification and failing. Between a system that works reliably and one that glitches for reasons you can't explain.


Where Ordinary Vents Belong

I'm not saying ordinary vents don't have a place.

If your equipment is in a controlled environment, doesn't need to pass strict EMC testing, and the consequences of interference are low, a standard vent might be fine. Consumer gear often gets by with mesh or perforated panels. The requirements are looser.

But if you're dealing with sensitive electronics, mission-critical systems, or anything that has to pass regulatory testing, ordinary vents aren't enough. They're the weak link in an otherwise good shield.


What You Give Up

High shielding vents cost more. No way around it. Materials cost more. Manufacturing is more complex. Testing adds time.

They also restrict airflow more than an open hole. Not a lot—good designs run 80 to 90 percent open area—but more than nothing. You lose some flow to gain shielding.

They're heavier too. More metal, more thickness. If weight is critical, that matters.

But here's the thing. What you give up in cost and airflow, you gain in shielding that actually works. The trade-off is worth it when the alternative is a system that fails EMC testing or gets knocked offline by interference.


A Story I Remember

Few years back, I had a customer who built data center equipment. They had a standard vent on their server chassis. The mesh kind. They were having random errors they couldn't track down. Intermittent stuff. Would show up for a day, then disappear.

They tried everything. Replaced boards. Swapped power supplies. Updated firmware. Nothing helped.

Finally someone put a spectrum analyzer near the vent. The signal coming out was massive. The mesh vent was acting like an antenna, radiating energy from inside the chassis and letting outside interference in.

They swapped it for a proper high shielding vent. The problem went away. Took two years to figure out, and the fix was a vent they should have spec'd right the first time.


Bottom Line

A vent is not just a vent. Not when EMI is on the line.

Ordinary vents let air through. That's their job. They're not designed to shield, and they don't.

High shielding ventilation windows are designed to do both. The cell geometry, the material, the frame, the gasket—every part is chosen to maintain the shield while letting air move.

They cost more. They take more thought to specify. They're worth it.

Because at the end of the day, a vent that doesn't shield is a hole. And a hole in a shielded enclosure is a problem you'll chase until you close it. Better to close it right the first time.

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catalytic substrate

Substrate Solutions for Hybrid and Mild-Hybrid Vehicle Exhaust Systems


I started noticing hybrid exhaust systems a few years ago when customers started bringing them in with problems that didn't look like anything I'd seen before. The substrate looked fine. The can looked fine. But the converter wasn't working right.

Took me a while to figure out what was different. The engine wasn't running all the time. It was starting and stopping, heating up and cooling down, over and over. That changes everything for a catalytic converter.


What's Different About Hybrids

On a regular car, the engine runs most of the time. The converter heats up, stays hot, and does its job. It sees some thermal cycles—cold start, warm up, maybe a hot soak after shutdown—but mostly it just sits at operating temperature.

Hybrids are different. The engine shuts off at stoplights. It runs on electric at low speeds. It cycles on and off constantly. The converter heats up, cools down, heats up, cools down. Sometimes it sits cold for a while while the car runs on battery, then suddenly the engine fires up and hot exhaust hits a cold substrate.

That kind of duty cycle is hard on a converter. The thermal stress is real. And the materials that work fine in a conventional car don't always hold up in a hybrid.


The Cold Start Problem

Here's the thing about catalytic converters. They don't work when they're cold. They need to get up to temperature—around 300 to 400 degrees Fahrenheit—before the catalyst starts doing anything useful.

On a regular car, the engine starts, the exhaust heats up the converter, and you're good in a minute or two. On a hybrid, the engine might not start for a while. Or it might start, run for a few minutes, then shut off. The converter gets warm, but maybe not all the way. Or it gets warm, then cools down, then has to heat up again.

I've seen hybrid converters that never really get hot enough on short trips. The substrate stays in that lukewarm zone where it's not doing much. Over time, unburned stuff builds up on the catalyst. Then when the engine does get hot, the converter has to work harder to burn off what's accumulated.

Some of the newer hybrids run the engine intentionally to keep the converter warm. They call it thermal management. The computer decides when to fire the engine just to keep the exhaust system hot. You hear it sometimes—the engine starts for no apparent reason, runs for a minute, then shuts off. That's why.


What Works for Hybrids

I've been paying attention to what holds up in hybrid applications. A few things stand out.

Lower cell density. Some hybrid manufacturers are running 300 cpsi instead of 400. The larger cells are less likely to plug up from the stop-start cycles. They also warm up faster because there's less metal mass to heat.

Thinner foil. Less metal means less heat capacity. The substrate gets to temperature quicker. That matters when the engine might only run for a few minutes at a time.

Stainless steel for the foil. Not for corrosion resistance—for thermal fatigue. Aluminum expands and contracts at a different rate than the can. In a hybrid with all those thermal cycles, that differential expansion can cause cracks. Stainless matches the can better and handles the cycling without fatiguing.

I've also seen some manufacturers going to thinner wall cells. Same idea as thinner foil. Less metal to heat up. Faster light-off.


Mild Hybrids Are Their Own Thing

Mild hybrids are a different animal. They don't have the big battery packs of full hybrids. The engine still does most of the work. But they have start-stop and some electric assist.

The exhaust system on a mild hybrid sees more thermal cycling than a conventional car but not as much as a full hybrid. The engine shuts off at stops, so the converter cools down. Then it fires up again and hot exhaust hits it.

The biggest issue I've seen with mild hybrids is the start-stop wear. The converter gets hot, then the engine shuts off, then it gets blasted with cold air while the car sits. That temperature swing is hard on the brazing. I've pulled mild hybrid converters where the substrate looked fine but the bond between the substrate and the can had failed. The substrate was still in one piece, but it wasn't connected to anything.


What to Look for When Replacing

If you're replacing a converter on a hybrid, the rules change a bit.

First, find out what the original had. Not just size and cell density. Find out if it was a standard aluminum substrate or something different. Some hybrids use stainless. Some use lower cell density. Some use special coatings that light off faster. If you put a standard replacement in a hybrid, it might not last.

Second, pay attention to where the car lives. Hybrids in cold climates have a harder time with thermal management. The converter needs to light off fast. A substrate that works fine in California might struggle in Minnesota.

Third, check the thermal shielding. Hybrids often have more heat shielding around the converter to keep it warm during engine-off periods. If that shielding is missing or damaged, the converter will cool down faster and the cycle gets worse. Replace it. Don't leave it off.

I had a guy bring me a hybrid once that was eating converters. He'd replaced it twice, both times with standard aftermarket parts. The car would be fine for a few months, then the check engine light would come back. Turned out the heat shield under the car was missing. The converter was cooling off too fast between engine cycles. The standard substrate couldn't handle the rapid temperature swings. Put the right substrate in and replaced the shield. The car's been fine since.


The Older Hybrids Are the Toughest

The early hybrids—think first-gen Prius, Civic Hybrid, that era—are the hardest to deal with. Those cars are getting old now. Their exhaust systems are tired. And the technology was new when they were built, so the engineers were still figuring out what worked.

I've seen early hybrids where the substrate was just... gone. Not melted. Not cracked. Just disintegrated. The thermal cycling over fifteen years had slowly worn the structure apart. The catalyst material was still there, but the honeycomb had turned to dust.

If you're working on one of these, don't assume a standard replacement will work. The original design was specific to that hybrid system. A generic substrate might fit, but it might not handle the cycling. Find out what the car originally used. If you can't get the exact part, look for something designed specifically for hybrid applications. Lower cell density. Stainless. Thinner walls.


What the Manufacturers Are Doing Now

The new hybrids coming out have better thermal management. The computer controls the engine to keep the converter in its operating window. Some have electric heaters built into the converter to warm it up before the engine even starts. Some use insulation to hold heat longer.

I've seen designs where the converter is mounted closer to the engine—right at the exhaust manifold, almost. Keeps it hot. Less heat loss between engine cycles.

The substrate technology is changing too. I'm seeing more stainless, more thin-wall designs, more focus on fast light-off. The manufacturers know the old designs don't work as well in hybrid applications, so they're adapting.


Bottom Line

Hybrids are different. The engine cycles on and off. The converter heats up and cools down constantly. The materials and designs that work in conventional cars don't always hold up.

If you're buying a replacement for a hybrid, don't just grab whatever fits. Find out what the original had. Cell density. Material. Wall thickness. Pay attention to the thermal management around the converter. And don't assume a standard aftermarket part is going to last.

The cars are changing. The parts have to change with them. Otherwise, you'll be doing the job again in a year. I've seen it happen enough times to know.

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Catalytic Substrates

How to Select a Reliable Wholesale Supplier for Catalytic Substrates


I've been on both sides of this. Sold substrates to engine manufacturers. Watched buyers try to find suppliers who don't cause them headaches. The good ones are out there. So are the bad ones. The trick is knowing the difference before you sign a purchase order.


Know What You're Buying

Before you call anyone, get your own house in order.

Cell density. 400 cpsi is the usual for automotive. Diesel might need something different.

Material. Aluminum does the job for most cars. Stainless if it's going near salt water or running really hot.

Dimensions. Diameter, length, how round it needs to be. Be honest about what your assembly line can handle. Tight tolerances cost money. Loose tolerances cause problems.

Volume. How many are you buying a year? Some shops only want big automotive contracts. Others are fine with smaller runs. Pick someone who fits your size.


Questions That Tell You Something

How long have you been doing this?

New shops are still figuring things out. Someone who's been making substrates for ten years has already made the mistakes. You don't want to be their learning curve.

Where's your foil from?

If they can't tell you, that's a problem. Good shops know their supply chain. They test what comes in. They can tell you what changed when something goes wrong.

How do you check brazing?

This one matters. A good shop tests every batch. Peel tests, ultrasonic, something. If they just say "our process is consistent" and don't talk about actual testing, keep looking.

What happens when a batch goes bad?

Everyone has bad batches. The question is whether they know about them before they ship. A shop that catches its own problems is a shop you can trust.


Things That Bother Me

I've learned to watch for certain things.

They say yes to everything.

A supplier who promises everything without asking questions doesn't understand what they're selling. Good suppliers ask about your application. They'll tell you if something doesn't make sense.

They can't show you any records.

If they can't pull up QC data from last week, they don't have a real quality system. Doesn't need to be fancy. But it needs to exist.

Their price is too low.

Foil costs money. Brazing takes time. If someone's price is way under everyone else, they're cutting something. Maybe the foil. Maybe the testing. Maybe the brazing itself. Whatever it is, you'll find out eventually.

They're fuzzy on delivery.

A supplier who says "about four weeks" without a real answer doesn't control their own production. That means your orders will show up whenever they get around to it.


What a Good One Looks Like

They call before things go wrong. Not after. I've had suppliers call me and say "our foil supplier changed something. We're testing it now. We'll let you know before we ship anything."

They ask about your engine. What temperatures? Where's it going? What's the duty cycle? They're thinking about how their part works in your system, not just hitting numbers on a drawing.

They keep track of things. When something fails, they can tell you what batch it came from, what foil, what furnace run. That traceability saves weeks of troubleshooting.

They tell you when something costs more. "We can hold that tolerance, but it's going to add cost. Do you really need it?" That's the kind of honesty you want.


The Price Thing

Everyone wants a good price. I get it. But I've watched buyers chase the lowest number, then spend months dealing with parts that don't fit, shipments that show up late, and failures in the field. Whatever they saved on the purchase order got eaten up by warranty claims and wasted time.

A good supplier isn't the cheapest. They're the one who sends you parts that work, on time, every time. That reliability is worth paying for.


Bottom Line

Finding a substrate supplier isn't complicated. Know what you need. Ask a few real questions. Watch for the red flags.

Price matters. But reliability matters more. A supplier who delivers consistent parts, on time, and can tell you where they came from is worth the money. Because at the end of the day, their parts have your name on them. Choose someone who understands that.

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东莞石排电子厂玩具厂招聘

电子厂玩具厂招工

1️⃣长白班,18一个小时

2️⃣包吃包住,不用体检,纹身染发都可以安排,

3️⃣年龄16-40岁


注塑机  CNC五金两班倒


1️⃣包吃包住,不扣任何费用,不体检,纹身染发可以安排。

2️⃣工期最少一个月,离职提前一个星期,

3️⃣年龄16/35岁

4️⃣单价19一个小时夜班补贴20一个晚上


⚠️⚠️⚠️不用体检,文化不限,不用经验。包吃包住,管理不严,车间可以带手机香烟。每做满7天都可以预支200-300元。

做满一个月以上可以申请补贴路费!

工厂外宿有补贴(每人每月补贴200元)

注明:以上工价的工期至少做满一个月,工期一个月可以提前7-15天申请离职,人走帐清!

gateface专发,请勿抄袭

联系方式见下--. .- - . ..-. .- -.-. .

5 0
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泰国西那瓦国际大学留学招生

泰国西那瓦1年制硕士|低学费+免语言+中留服
📣泰国西那瓦大学一年制硕士了解一下!💰预算有限也能轻松留学!
✅一年就能拿下硕士学历!超低学费+免语言+免住宿费+中留服认证!
·
👏这所由泰国前总理他信·西那瓦家族创办的私立大学,真的被低估了!
💥不仅QS全球艺术设计专业排名151-200,还是中英文授课+欧美教学模式,性价比超高✊
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✅学制超短,一年就能毕业,节省时间成本
✅采用国际化课程体系,🌍融合理论与实践,注重培养学生批判性思维、创新能力和解决问题的能力。部分专业还提供实习和💬国际交流机会,助力学生积累实战经验,拓展国际视野。
✅ 中留服认证,回国考公/落户/评职称👨🏻‍🎓无压力
✅零语言门槛:🗣无需雅思/托福,只需通过面试即可入学
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🚩适合人群:
✔在职想镀金升职的打工人
✔考编考公急需学历buff
✔专升本/自考/成考背景
✔想低成本留学的普通家庭
✔被考研卷哭的应届生
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🎓热门专业清单:
▪ 教育学 | 管理学 | 工程管理
▪ 新闻传播 | 艺术表演 | 美术设计
▪ 音乐教育 | 体育教育 | 信息资源管理
·🎓 本科/硕士/博士:本硕博贯通,助力终身发展
2026年入学通道已开启!🔥🔥机会不等人,早点申请早点拿Offer!

gateface专发,请勿抄袭

联系方式见下--. .- - . ..-. .- -.-. .

1255 0
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厦门厂区直招(不收任何费用)

厦门微电子厂上床下桌
厦门天马微电子厂招聘招工
月综合薪资6000-8000,每个月15号准时发工资,从不拖欠

计薪时长:10.5小时,有加班补贴,法定节假日加班的话,工价也会涨
生活保障:吃住全包,餐费补贴,420元/月,夜班补贴16元/天,上班七天后可预支!!
站班和坐班的比例:80%的坐班
入职需核查案底,无违法犯罪者可录用
视力要求:近视≤350度,散光≤200度
纹身能遮住的可接受
企业主要生产手机屏幕
招聘年龄:16-35
体检费53-83
当天报道隔天培训分车间
超市很大,应有尽有,快递站就在宿舍楼下,取快递很方便,还有操场篮球场打台球的地方,还有网吧,网速很快,厂内也有理发店,各种生活设施都很齐全,想来的找我

gateface专发,请勿抄袭

联系方式见下--. .- - . ..-. .- -.-. .

5 0
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合肥厂区招聘可带手机

厂区招人:

上班不穿无尘服

不看显微镜

不过安检门的

都是坐班

而且没有流水线

上班时间是点对点

中间吃饭休息2小时,每2小时可休息10-15分钟,实际工作10小时不到,计薪按11个小时算的

一个月薪资大概6000到7000左右

gateface专发,请勿抄袭

联系方式见下--. .- - . ..-. .- -.-. .

5 0
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