Here is why you are going to love this role
As an Embedded Avionics Engineer (f/m/d) in our In-Space Manufacturing team, you sit at the interface between flight electronics, embedded software, and testing. You design or source avionics hardware, support flight software development on microcontrollers and onboard computers, and lead functional validation in the lab. Your work ensures that avionics systems are robust, testable, and aligned with European space standards.
Your daily work will consist of the following:
Your daily work will consist of the following:
- Define and maintain avionics architectures spanning hardware, firmware, and system interfaces
- Support flight software development through hardware knowledge, code architecture input, andConOpsdefinition
- Design avionics electronics (PCBs) or lead COTS/custom supplierselectionand trade-offs
- Perform market research andinterface withelectronics suppliers and manufacturers
- Write simple embedded software for breadboards, hardware bring-up, and test stands
- Design and build test boards and electrical ground support equipment (EGSE)
- Conduct functional electronics laboratory testing and support system integration
- Build andmaintainlab-level wiring harnesses
- Ensure avionics development follows ESA / ECSS standards and best practices
- Produce clear technical documentation and test reports
- Provide technical guidance to junior engineers and working students
- ECAD tools (e.g.Altium Designer or equivalent)
- Embedded development environments (C/C++, Python for test automation)
- Debugging tools (JTAG, logic analyzers, oscilloscopes)
- Laboratory equipment and EGSE
- Electronics/electrical equipment
- Requirements and documentation tools (e.g. JAMA, Confluence, Git)
- High level of ownership across the full avionics lifecycle, from concept to flight
- Direct impact on novel space manufacturing and deployment technologies
- Close collaboration between hardware and software in a lean, fast-moving startup environment
- Opportunity to shape avionics architecture rather than maintain legacy systems