Be at the heart of actionFly remote-controlled drones into enemy territory to gather vital information.

Apply Now

Welder

Poole
2 days ago
Create job alert

Position: 2 MIG Welders & 2 Welder/Fabricators

Job ID: 936/285

Location: Poole – Workshop

Rate/Salary: £23p/hour – £25p/hour

Type: Contract – 3 to 4 weeks

HSB Technical Ltd is a specialist recruiter within the Power & Propulsion, Shipbuilding, Shipping & Energy and Aerospace sectors. We have a number of permanent and contract vacancies for multiple businesses across the UK and overseas.

The below job description will outline this position of: MIG Welder / Welder-Fabricator

Typically, this person will carry out high-quality MIG welding and fabrication work within a workshop environment, producing and assembling steel components to specification.

HSB Technical’s client is a very established and well-regarded business entity.

Duties and Responsibilities of the MIG Welder / Welder-Fabricator:

•MIG welding of tables, curved channels and associated steel components

•Cutting, preparing and assembling materials to drawings

•Fabricating structural or bespoke metalwork as required

•Ensuring welds meet quality and safety standards

•Working from engineering drawings and verbal instructions

•Maintaining a clean and safe workshop environment

Qualifications and Requirements for the MIG Welder / Welder-Fabricator:

•2–3 years’ experience in MIG welding

•Ability to work from fabrication drawings

•Experience working with mild steel structural components

•Good workshop skills including cutting, grinding and fitting

•Strong attention to detail and commitment to quality

This vacancy is being advertised by HSB Technical, who have been appointed to act as the recruitment consultancy for this role

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Welder Fabricator

Welders

Tig Welder

TIG Welder

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.

Space Industry Recruitment Trends 2025 (UK): What Job Seekers Need To Know About Today’s Hiring Process

Summary: UK space‑sector hiring has shifted from pedigree‑first screening to capability‑driven evaluation across the full stack—spacecraft systems, payload/RF, flight software, GNC/ADCS, propulsion, structures/thermal, AIT (assembly–integration–test), mission/ground operations, reliability/radiation, and compliance (ECSS, export control). Employers want proof you can build, test, operate and scale space systems safely and economically. This guide explains what’s changed, what to expect in interviews & how to prepare—especially for satellite/spacecraft engineers, payload & RF/MM‑wave, flight & ground software, GNC/ADCS, power/thermal, AIT/test, mission ops, data/EO, and space product/TPM roles. Who this is for: Systems engineers, payload/RF engineers, flight software & FDIR, GNC/ADCS, power/thermal/structures, propulsion, AIT/test, reliability/radiation, QA/compliance, ground segment/cloud, mission operations, EO/data processing, and product/programme managers targeting roles in the UK space ecosystem.

Why Space Careers in the UK Are Becoming More Multidisciplinary

The UK’s space sector is growing fast — from satellite systems and Earth observation to satellite communications, space robotics, propulsion, space data analytics, and mission operations. But the nature of space work is changing. Projects involving satellites, launch systems, space robotics and ground infrastructure are now embedded in regulation, public perception, human interaction and cross-disciplinary design. Space careers in the UK used to be dominated by engineers, astrophysicists, systems analysts and telemetry experts. Today, they increasingly demand fluency not only in aerospace, software, electronics & data, but also in law, ethics, psychology, linguistics & design. After all, space systems operate under treaties, privacy constraints, public scrutiny, international collaborations and human interfaces. In this article, we explore why space careers in the UK are becoming more multidisciplinary, how those allied fields intersect with space work, and what job-seekers & employers must do to thrive in this evolving cosmos.

UK Space Team Structures Explained: Who Does What in a Modern Space Department

The UK space sector is rapidly expanding. With growth in satellite design, Earth observation, communications, launch systems, space science, downstream applications, and regulatory and operational services, there’s rising demand for skilled professionals across many disciplines. Building a high-impact space organisation requires well-defined team structures, clear roles, strong collaboration, and alignment across engineering, science, operations, regulation, and commercial functions. If you are applying for roles via UKSpaceJobs.co.uk or hiring into your company, this guide will help you understand the principal roles you’ll find in a space team, how they interact during mission lifecycles, what skills UK employers expect, salary norms, common challenges, and best practice for structuring space teams that succeed.