Maintenance Engineer

Rugby
1 week ago
Create job alert

Maintenance Engineer
Rugby, Warwickshire
£45,000
Days – 37 Hours Per Week – Mon – Fri – Early Finish Friday

Benefits

33 Days Holiday (25 + Banks)

Excellent employee retention rates among the maintenance team

Sharesave Scheme (After qualifying period)

Company Sick Pay Scheme (After 12 months service)

EAP Employee Assistance Programme

We are looking for a multi skilled maintenance engineer with an electrical bias to join our small but long-standing team of maintenance engineers at our manufacturing facility in Rugby!

We employ over 100 staff in Rugby with a 3 strong maintenance team, manufacturing a wide variety of high-quality products to a number of different sectors including the aerospace, automotive and medical industries to name a few.

Day to day you’ll be responsible for carrying out reactive maintenance across plant machinery including kilns, furnaces, heat treatment machines, CNC lathes and milling machines, ovens, amongst others. As well as this you’ll be adhering to a TPM scheme to optimise efficiency across the plant – this role is a good mixture of planned and reactive maintenance.

The Successful Engineer

Minimum of 5 years’ experience as an electrically biased multi skilled maintenance engineer in an industrial environment

Qualified to a minimum of NVQ/City and Guilds L3 in a maintenance discipline

Electrical bias is a must for this role

Ideally an engineer from a manufacturing background – However this is not a dealbreaker and maintenance engineers from all backgrounds are encouraged to apply.

Get in touch with Matt Morson at Stirling Warrington regarding this role or any other maintenance role in the Warwickshire area

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Maintenance Engineer

Maintenance Engineer

Maintenance Engineer

Maintenance Engineer

Maintenance Engineer

Maintenance Engineer

Get the latest insights and jobs direct. Sign up for our newsletter.

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

Industry Insights

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

Thales Alenia Space Jobs in 2025: Your Complete UK Guide to Building Europe’s Next‑Generation Satellites & Lunar Gateways

From pressurised modules orbiting the Moon to broadband mega‑constellations 1,200 km above Earth, Thales Alenia Space (TAS) sits at the heart of Europe’s space ambitions. A joint venture between Thales (67 %) and Leonardo (33 %), TAS employs more than 8,500 people across 17 sites—with growing hubs in Bristol and the Harwell Space Cluster. The firm is lead contractor for Europe’s IRIS² secure‑connect constellation (green‑lit in 2024) and supplies modules for NASA/ESA’s Lunar Gateway. Unsurprisingly, TAS has ramped up hiring: a quick scan of the Thales Alenia Space careers portal shows vacancies in systems engineering, RF payloads, AIT and mission operations. Whether you are a UK graduate dreaming of building communications payloads, a thermal engineer keen to keep lunar habitats at room temperature, or a programme manager itching to deliver the next Copernicus Earth‑observation satellite, this guide explains how to land a Thales Alenia Space job in 2025.

Satellite Engineering vs. Launch Vehicle Engineering vs. Ground Systems: Which Path Should You Choose?

The space sector has experienced a remarkable resurgence in recent years, fuelled by commercial enterprises, miniaturised satellites, reusable rockets, and interplanetary missions. From building satellites that gather climate data to launching payloads on low-cost rockets or orchestrating ground infrastructure for real-time mission control, this industry spans a vast array of engineering and scientific disciplines. If you’ve been browsing space jobs on www.ukspacejobs.co.uk, you’ll likely notice a variety of roles falling into Satellite Engineering, Launch Vehicle Engineering, or Ground Systems. Which path should you pursue if you’re passionate about shaping humanity’s presence beyond Earth? In this comprehensive guide, we’ll define these three primary fields, compare overlapping vs. unique skills, delve into job titles and salary ranges, share real-world examples, and offer career tips. Whether your fascination lies in designing high-performance rockets, creating satellite constellations for broadband coverage, or ensuring seamless ground-to-space communication, understanding these subfields will help you align your talents and ambitions with the right trajectory—both literally and figuratively.

Which Programming Languages Should You Learn for a Career in Space Technology

From satellite constellations delivering broadband internet to Mars rovers and deep-space probes, the space sector is one of the most ambitious and technically challenging industries you can work in. Careers in space technology often blend aerospace engineering, embedded software, scientific computing, and mission-critical systems, each requiring a specific set of programming and engineering skills. If you’re browsing opportunities on www.ukspacejobs.co.uk, a natural question arises: Which programming language(s) should you learn to thrive in the space domain? The answer depends on your chosen speciality. Spacecraft flight software might prioritise C/C++ for reliability and performance, while ground stations and data pipelines may use Python for automation or MATLAB for signal processing. In advanced research environments, Fortran still persists for numerical simulations, whereas Rust is emerging for secure, robust embedded applications. In this guide, we’ll examine: Key programming languages vital for space tech. The pros, cons, and typical use cases of each. A hands-on project idea to help you build relevant aerospace experience. Essential resources and tips for www.ukspacejobs.co.uk