AIT Electrical Engineer

Stevenage
10 hours ago
Create job alert

Satellite AIT EGSE Engineer

Location: On‑site (UK Eyes Only)

Clearance: SC Clearance Required

Rate: £45.00 per hour (Umbrella, Inside IR35)

Hours: 37 per week

Step into a role at the heart of spacecraft innovation. As a Satellite AIT EGSE Engineer, you'll be the technical authority behind the electrical ground support equipment that powers spacecraft build, integration, and test. This is your chance to work on mission‑critical systems, solve complex engineering challenges, and directly contribute to the success of space missions.

What You'll Be Doing

You'll take ownership of the electrical test racks and EGSE systems that keep spacecraft development moving. Your day‑to‑day will include:

Maintaining, validating, and fault‑finding on advanced electronic and RF test racks
Administering and configuring computer systems and networks across Windows and Linux environments
Setting up and securing local networks, including firewall configuration
Supporting environmental and launch test campaigns
Preparing test specifications, reviewing supplier data packs, and contributing to design reviews
Ensuring EGSE systems are mission‑ready through routine maintenance and continuous improvementThis is a hands‑on, high‑impact engineering role where your expertise directly influences spacecraft performance and reliability.

What You Bring

Essential Skills

Degree in Electrical Engineering (or equivalent experience, 5+ years)
Strong theoretical and practical knowledge of electronic and RF test racks
Proven fault‑finding ability down to board/component level
Confident administering networks and computers (Windows & Linux)
Solid documentation skills for procedures, reports, and technical notes
Familiarity with interfaces such as Mil‑1553, SpaceWire, CAN bus, RS232/422
Experience with ATE environments (PCI, VXI, PXI)
Competence with general-purpose lab test equipment
Experience designing, manufacturing, or commissioning test systems
Willingness to support shift work and overseas test campaigns

Desirable Skills

Experience integrating electrical systems on spacecraft
Knowledge of TMTC databases
Ability to write test sequences/scripts for spacecraft systems (including FDIR)
Background in environmental or launch test campaigns
Strong Linux/Unix skills, especially bash scripting
Programming experience in C, Java, Python, TCL, or VBA

Why This Role Matters

You won't just be maintaining equipment - you'll be enabling missions. Every test rack you configure, every fault you resolve, and every system you validate plays a direct role in ensuring spacecraft reach orbit safely and operate flawlessly.

If you thrive in high‑tech environments, love solving intricate engineering puzzles, and want to be part of something that literally leaves the planet, this is the role for you.

This vacancy is being advertised by Belcan

Related Jobs

View all jobs

AIT) Electrical Test Operations Engineer

Satellite AIT Electrical Systems Engineer

Senior Electrical AIT Engineer - Space Systems (Hybrid)

Senior Electrical AIT Engineer — Space Systems (Hybrid)

Senior Electrical AIT Engineer – Space Systems (Hybrid)

Lead AIT Engineer

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

New Space Employers to Watch in 2026: UK and Global Organisations Driving the Future of Space Careers

The space industry is entering a new era of growth, innovation, and commercial opportunity. Satellites, space exploration, Earth observation, space data analytics, launch systems and space infrastructure are all areas seeing rapid expansion, bringing demand for engineers, scientists, operations specialists and software developers. For professionals exploring opportunities on www.UKSpaceJobs.co.uk , identifying employers that are scaling, securing major contracts, attracting investment, or establishing UK operations is vital. This article highlights the most exciting space employers to watch in 2026, including UK space start‑ups, established aerospace organisations with UK teams, and global firms investing in British space talent.

How Many Space Industry Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a UK Space Job?

If you’re pursuing a career in the space industry — whether that’s spacecraft engineering, mission operations, space software, satellite systems, ground segment integration or space data analytics — it’s easy to feel overwhelmed by the sheer number of tools, platforms and technologies mentioned in job adverts. One role wants experience with CAD and FEA software. Another asks for experience with GNSS simulation. A third mentions mission scheduling tools, RF link analysis suites, Python, C++, continuous integration — and it seems there’s always another acronym to learn. With so much listed, many candidates fall into the trap of thinking they must master every tool under the sun before they’ll be taken seriously. Here’s the honest truth most UK space hiring managers won’t say out loud: 👉 They don’t hire you because you’ve heard of every tool — they hire you because you can apply the right tools to solve real space problems, explain your reasoning clearly, and deliver results. Tools matter, but they always serve a purpose: achieving mission goals, improving reliability, reducing risk, delivering data, or enabling collaboration. Tools are enablers — not trophies. So how many tools do you actually need to know to get a space job? The answer is much fewer and far more strategic than you might think. This article breaks down: what tools employers really expect which ones are core across most space roles which ones are role-specific how to present your tool proficiency on your CV and in interviews

What Hiring Managers Look for First in Space Sector Job Applications (UK Guide)

The space industry is one of the most exciting and multidisciplinary sectors in technology and engineering today. Whether you’re applying for roles in spacecraft design, aerospace systems, robotics, satellite communications, mission operations, payload engineering, space software, ground systems, or scientific research, your application must quickly show hiring managers that you are relevant, technically credible and ready to deliver. In the UK space jobs market — spanning organisations from startups to defence primes, agencies, research labs and commercial constellations — hiring managers do not read every word of your CV. They scan applications rapidly, often making a judgement about whether to read further within the first 10–20 seconds. This guide breaks down exactly what hiring managers look for first in space sector applications, how they assess CVs and portfolios, why specific signals matter, and how you can position your experience to stand out on www.ukspacejobs.co.uk .