Harness Design Engineer
Anduril · Costa Mesa, CA · Hardware Engineering : Electrical Engineering : EWIS
About this role
Anduril is hiring a mid-level Systems Engineer in the operations function based in Costa Mesa, CA. The posting calls out experience with Computer Vision. Compensation is listed at $98,000–$171,000 per year.
- Role
- Systems Engineer
- Function
- operations
- Level
- mid
- Track
- Individual contributor
- Employment
- Full-time
- Location
- Costa Mesa, CA
- Department
- Hardware Engineering : Electrical Engineering : EWIS
More roles at Anduril
Job description
from Anduril careersAnduril Industries is a defense technology company with a mission to transform U.S. and allied military capabilities with advanced technology. By bringing the expertise, technology, and business model of the 21st century’s most innovative companies to the defense industry, Anduril is changing how military systems are designed, built and sold. Anduril’s family of systems is powered by Lattice OS, an AI-powered operating system that turns thousands of data streams into a realtime, 3D command and control center. As the world enters an era of strategic competition, Anduril is committed to bringing cutting-edge autonomy, AI, computer vision, sensor fusion, and networking technology to the military in months, not years.
WHAT YOU’LL DO
- Provide the engineering expertise to design, fabricate and integrate harnesses systems and represent the harness discipline on a project
- Investigate, plan, design and develop harnesses to meet various technical requirements
- Research, select and procure appropriate connectors, back-shells, contacts, wire, shielding, and cable construction for the product to meet appropriate environmental requirements
- Develop and generate harness system block diagrams and wire diagrams to release for production
- Participate in design reviews and provide input to identify issues and drive design choices
- Prepare harness assembly instructions and test procedures, incorporating your knowledge of industry standards and best practices