Senior Electronics Engineer
Seasats
- San Diego, CA
- $120,000-140,000 per year
- Permanent
- Full-time
- You've been designing, building, debugging, and hacking electrical systems (PCBs, cable systems, sensors) for years.
- You've worked on difficult technical projects as part of a team.
- You're able to work autonomously.
- You have a keen understanding of deadlines and time constraints and modulate your methodology accordingly.
- You've produced documentation for board assembly, to facilitate firmware development, and to communicate systems designs to company leadership.
- You've designed an electrical system that has been produced in quantities of 50+ units.
- You have experience with Altium Designer.
- Rapidly understand the project's design goals and key constraints
- Quickly lay out the key building blocks and communicate them in design meetings.
- Identify the highest risk items and initially focus on rapidly derisking them.
- Often we kick off these steps early and then carry on with parallel development so that if things go well we're two steps ahead. The cost to this is that you'll occasionally have to throw some work in the trash.
- Design and execute a test plan to find issues and demonstrate functionality. Our systems are exposed to a variety of conditions in the field, so selecting test parameters that address compound worst-case scenarios is an important part of the design and test processes.
- Communicate findings and document outcomes in a practical manner.
- Refine the design as needed.
- Document how the production team should build the system, run it by the electronics production lead, and help the production team build first articles.
- In some cases, design test assemblies for the QA team to use.
- Stock options
- Competitive insurance (including a 99% employer-covered Gold HMO plan or other options)
- 401k matching up to 4% of salary
- Four free lunches per week
- An employee activity fund
- A pet-friendly office
- Unlimited/Flex PTO
- Get Stuff Done
- Be Kind
- Fight Entropy
- Attack with Overwhelming Force
- Ask More Questions
- Lines, Not Dots