National AI Awards 2025Discover AI's trailblazers! Join us to celebrate innovation and nominate industry leaders.

Nominate & Attend

Mechanical Technician (Engine Build) - eVTOL / Aerospace - Hampshire - £40k

EVEREC
Edinburgh
1 month ago
Applications closed

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Mechanical Technician

Mechanical Technician

Mechanical Technician - Aerospace

Aircraft Mechanical Technician

Maintenance Technician - Rolling Stock

Assembly and Test Technician (Nights)

Mechanical Technician (Engine Build) - eVTOL / Aerospace - Hampshire - £40k


Job Title:Mechanical Technician

Location:Fareham, Hampshire (5 Days Per Week on Site)

Salary:£30,000 to £40,000 per year


Job Overview:

We are seeking a highly skilled and motivated Mechanical Technician to join our team. The successful candidate will play a crucial role in the preparation, assembly, and testing of engine components for advanced engineering projects. If you have a keen eye for detail, experience in mechanical assembly and testing, and a passion for precision engineering, this could be the perfect opportunity for you.


Key Responsibilities:

  • Preparation and kitting of base engine, including installation of re-drive assembly and belt tension.
  • Wiring loom installation and assembly of engine frame sub-assemblies, including fuel systems and electronics.
  • Installation of heat shields, baffles, and exhaust system components.
  • Installation of throttle cables, servo units, and throttle balancing.
  • Engine installation inspection, including external and dressing components.
  • Internal engine inspection using borescope for diagnostics.
  • Flashing engine ECU with the correct calibration file.
  • Analysis of engine running data to identify and resolve issues.
  • Engine fault diagnosis and troubleshooting.


Additional Duties:

  • Monitor and update the Bill of Materials (BoM) to ensure all components are accounted for.
  • Ensure CAD assembly models are up-to-date and align with the build process.
  • Manage stock levels for engine assembly parts and coordinate procurement requests according to the build schedule.
  • Pick sub-assembly kits for engine builds.
  • Experience in a test and development environment, including dyno or rig testing, would be advantageous.


Ideal Candidate Profile:

  • Good dexterity and a keen eye for detail.
  • Strong appreciation for the operation of combustion engines and related systems.
  • Experience in sub-assembly of mechanical parts, particularly in rotating or reciprocating machinery (e.g., pumps).
  • Disciplined and proactive approach to tasks, able to work independently without frequent supervision.
  • Accountable for actions and a high standard of work.


Experience/Qualifications:

  • Motorsports engine, transmission, or sub-assembly (damper/upright build) experience.
  • Motorcycle technician experience, particularly in racing or high-end dealership environments.
  • Historic motorsport or sub-assembly engine work experience.
  • Aerospace sub-assembly technician or engine building experience (preferred but not essential).


If this is of interest please apply on LinkedIn or email

National AI Awards 2025

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.

How to Get a Better Space Sector Job After a Lay-Off or Redundancy

Being made redundant from a role in the UK space sector can be disheartening. Whether your work was tied to satellite design, launch services, ground systems, mission operations, or Earth observation analytics, the experience and specialist knowledge you've gained is still highly valuable. The UK government’s Space Strategy, increased commercial investment, and new launch initiatives across Cornwall, Scotland, and Wales continue to drive opportunities in upstream and downstream space technologies. This guide will help you relaunch your career in the UK space sector after redundancy.

UK Space Jobs Salary Calculator 2025: Work Out Your Market Value in Seconds

Why last year’s pay survey already misfires for UK space talent Ask a Satellite Systems Engineer wrestling with RF budgets, a Mission Operations Analyst shepherding cubesats at 04:00 UTC, or a Launch Vehicle Propulsion Engineer machining ablative liners in Cornwall: “Am I earning what I deserve?” The honest answer drifts faster than orbital debris. Since early 2024 the UK Space Agency released £1.6 billion of National Space Strategy funding, SaxaVord’s spaceport edged toward its first vertical launch licence, and Harwell Campus welcomed three VC‑fuelled in‑orbit‑servicing start‑ups. Each headline ratcheted hiring demand—and salaries. A salary guide printed in 2024 is already as dated as a Block II GPS ephemeris: no mention of the Scottish micro‑launcher premium, the AI‑earth‑observation bubble, or the sudden scarcity of flight‑dynamics controllers who can wrangle multi‑constellation mega‑swarms. To replace guesswork with data, UKSpaceJobs.co.uk distilled a clear, three‑factor formula. Feed in your discipline, UK region & seniority; you’ll get a realistic 2025 baseline—no stale averages, no vague “competitive” claims. This article unpacks the formula, explores the forces inflating space salaries, and sets out concrete steps to boost your value within ninety days.

How to Present Space Sector Solutions to Non-Technical Audiences: A Public Speaking Guide for Job Seekers

The UK space sector is expanding fast—from satellite communications and Earth observation to propulsion, launch services, and space sustainability. But as the technology becomes more complex, employers increasingly want space professionals who can explain it simply and persuasively to non-technical audiences. Whether you're applying for a role in engineering, mission control, data analysis, policy, or business development, your ability to present clearly is now seen as a critical soft skill. In fact, many interviews now include public speaking tasks that test your communication style, clarity, and stakeholder awareness. This guide offers a practical framework for structuring your space sector presentations, tips for engaging slides, storytelling techniques that work in interviews, and advice on answering common questions from executives, clients, and policymakers.