Electronic Design Engineer - Temporary

Blue Arrow
Berkshire, United Kingdom
3 weeks ago
Job Type
Contract
Posted
25 Mar 2026 (3 weeks ago)

Electronics Design Engineer

Location: Berkshire (On-site)

Employment Type: Full-time Contract

Are you an Electronics Engineer who thrives on solving complex technical challenges and developing highly specialised products? This is an exciting opportunity to join an engineering team working on advanced illuminated control panels, display systems and integrated cockpit technologies used across aerospace, defence and industrial markets.

You'll be involved in designing and developing a wide range of aircraft‑fit equipment, including:

LED‑based illuminated panels

Electroluminescent lighting systems

Hidden‑until‑lit technologies

NVIS‑compatible panels

Miniature filament lamp assemblies

Integrated switch panels, annunciators, bezels and keyboardsIf you enjoy hands‑on engineering, full lifecycle product development and contributing to meaningful innovation, this role offers the perfect environment to grow and make an impact.

Key Responsibilities

Formalise and produce effective design solutions to meet customer requirements

Deliver full lifecycle product development from design through to manufacture

Manage project plans, track progress and ensure delivery on time and within budget

Work with external test houses to qualify products to customer specifications

Produce technical documentation including test procedures, calculations, datasheets, installation instructions and technical reports

Participate in design reviews, including Critical Design Reviews (CDR)

Provide technical support to Production and resolve issues in manufacturing processes

Support Sales with technical assistance and product selection

Maintain awareness of relevant engineering standards (IPC, MIL, DEF) and contribute to internal engineering standards

About You

You're someone who enjoys working across multiple projects, collaborating with multidisciplinary teams and taking ownership of technical challenges. You bring strong analytical thinking, creativity in problem‑solving and a passion for delivering high‑quality engineering solutions.

A Baseline Personnel Security Standard (BPSS) check will be required prior to starting.

Why This Role Stands Out

This Berkshire‑based role offers the chance to work on niche, high‑value products with real‑world impact. You'll join a collaborative engineering environment where precision, creativity and innovation come together. The products you help design will be used globally in demanding, safety‑critical applications - giving you the opportunity to see your work make a meaningful difference.

Blue Arrow is proud to be a Disability Confident Employer and is committed to helping find great work opportunities for great people

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Electronic Design Engineer

Octagon Group Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom
£60,000 pa

Electronic Design Engineer

Zenovo Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom
£40,000 – £45,000 pa

Electronic Design Engineer

Zenovo Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
£40,000 – £50,000 pa

Electronic Design Engineer

KO2 Embedded Recruitment Solutions Stroud, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom
£50,000 – £70,000 pa

Electronic Design Engineer

First Recruitment Group Worthing, West Sussex, United Kingdom
£30,000 – £35,000 pa

Electronic Design Engineer

Wallace Hind Selection Watford, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom
£65,000 – £75,000 pa

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.

Where to Advertise Semiconductor Jobs in the UK (2026 Guide)

Advertising semiconductor jobs in the UK requires a fundamentally different approach to most technical hiring. The candidate pool is one of the smallest and most specialised in any engineering discipline — spanning IC design engineers, process engineers, fab technicians, EDA tool developers, compound semiconductor physicists and power electronics specialists. General job boards are largely ineffective for semiconductor hiring. The community is tight-knit, highly academic in its roots and concentrated around a small number of university groups, fab facilities and design centres. Specialist boards, academic channels and direct community engagement are the primary sourcing strategies that work. This guide, published by SemiconductorJobs.co.uk, covers where to advertise semiconductor roles in the UK in 2026, how the main platforms compare, what employers should expect to pay, and what the data says about hiring across different role types.

New Semiconductor Employers to Watch in 2026: UK and International Companies Transforming Chip Careers

The semiconductor industry is entering a new era of investment, geopolitical significance, and technological innovation. As advanced chips power everything from artificial intelligence and edge computing to autonomous vehicles and 5G infrastructure, demand for skilled professionals across design, verification, fabrication, and test engineering continues to rise. For professionals exploring opportunities on www.SemiconductorJobs.co.uk , understanding which employers are scaling, raising funds, winning contracts, or establishing UK operations is critical. This article highlights the new semiconductor employers to watch in 2026, including UK innovators, major international players expanding locally, and emerging firms driving next‑generation semiconductor technologies.

How Many Semiconductor Tools Do You Need to Know to Get a Semiconductor Job?

If you’re pursuing a career in the semiconductor industry, it can feel like you’re expected to master an endless list of tools, software packages and lab equipment before you even submit a CV. One job advert wants experience with TCAD and process simulation, another mentions SPICE and yield tools, while yet another asks for test automation platforms, yield analysis software, hardware description languages, EDA suites and hundreds of others. With so many technical names thrown around, it’s easy to fall into “tool anxiety” — the feeling that you’re behind because you don’t know every piece of software, every lab instrument and every process control suite. Here’s the honest truth most semiconductor hiring managers won’t say out loud: 👉 They don’t hire you because you know every tool — they hire you because you can use the right tools to solve real engineering problems and explain your reasoning clearly. Tools matter, absolutely. But they exist to help you deliver measurable results — not to be collected like badges. So how many semiconductor tools do you actually need to know to get a job? The answer is a lot fewer than you might think — and far more focused on core capabilities than a long checklist. This guide breaks down what employers really value, which tools are essential, which are role-specific, and how to focus your learning so you are confident and credible.