Process Engineer

Searchability NS&D
Chester
2 weeks ago
Create job alert

PROCESS ENGINEER – Aircraft Modifications


  • Join the Manufacturing Engineering function supporting the Single Aisle aircraft programme
  • Initial contract until November 2026
  • £37 per hour via Umbrella | 35-hour working week
  • On-site role in Broughton
  • BPSS clearance required


ABOUT THE CLIENT

Our client is a major global aerospace manufacturer leading the development and production of world-class commercial aircraft. Their Broughton site is a key centre of excellence for Single Aisle aircraft build and industrialisation. As part of continued programme growth, they are seeking an experienced Process Engineer to support modification industrialisation and production readiness.


THE PROCESS ENGINEER ROLE

As a Process Engineer, you will support the industrialisation of major and minor aircraft modifications, ensuring smooth integration into production. Working across both mechanical and electrical systems, you will translate design intent into production-ready technical documentation and deliver robust work preparation to the shopfloor. You will collaborate with design, operations, supply chain and FAL teams to optimise manufacturing processes and support on-site issue resolution.


Key Responsibilities:

  • Produce and control Manufacturing Engineering data, technical instructions and documentation
  • Translate design intent to routings, BOMs, SOIs and STV calculations for production
  • Implement best-practice tools, processes and manufacturing methods
  • Ensure compliance with procedural, regulatory and airworthiness requirements
  • Project manage manufacturing and assembly process improvements
  • Analyse and optimise production capacity, recommending design or process changes
  • Provide hands-on support to operations, supply chain and final assembly for mech/elec systems


PROCESS ENGINEER – ESSENTIAL SKILLS

  • Strong knowledge of aircraft production and associated ME methods
  • Ability to work from first principles across manufacturing disciplines
  • Experience with SAP or similar business management tools
  • Working knowledge of Manufacturing Engineering, Design and BIS tools
  • Understanding of interactions across ME, Design, Operations and Supply Chain
  • Knowledge of lean principles
  • Effective verbal & written communication skills
  • Self-motivated, proactive, and confident in supporting cross-functional teams


TO BE CONSIDERED

Please apply through this advert or email . For more information, call . By applying for this role, you give express consent for us to process and submit (subject to required skills) your application to our client in conjunction with this vacancy only.

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Process Engineer

Process Engineer

Process Engineer

Process Engineer

Process Engineer

Process 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.

Semiconductor Jobs for Career Switchers in Their 30s, 40s & 50s (UK Reality Check)

Semiconductors sit behind almost everything: smartphones, EVs, medical devices, aerospace systems, telecoms networks, cloud data centres & the AI boom. In the UK, the semiconductor ecosystem spans chip design, IP, photonics, compound semiconductors, testing, packaging, equipment, supply chain & R&D. That breadth creates real opportunities for career switchers in their 30s, 40s & 50s, especially if you target roles where experience, process discipline & delivery skills matter as much as deep device physics. This article gives you a UK reality check: what semiconductor jobs actually look like, which roles are realistic for career switchers, what skills employers value, how long retraining tends to take & whether age is a barrier.

How to Write a Semiconductor Job Ad That Attracts the Right People

Semiconductors sit at the heart of modern technology. From consumer electronics and automotive systems to AI, defence, telecoms and advanced manufacturing, semiconductor professionals play a critical role in designing, fabricating and testing the components that power the global economy. Yet many employers struggle to attract the right candidates. Semiconductor job adverts often receive either very few applications or a high volume of unsuitable ones. Experienced engineers and scientists frequently ignore adverts that feel vague, generic or disconnected from the realities of semiconductor development and manufacturing. In most cases, the issue is not a shortage of talent — it is the clarity and quality of the job advert. Semiconductor professionals are detail-oriented, process-driven and highly selective. A poorly written job ad signals weak technical understanding and unclear expectations. A well-written one signals credibility, precision and long-term intent. This guide explains how to write a semiconductor job ad that attracts the right people, improves applicant quality and strengthens your employer brand.

Maths for Semiconductor Jobs: The Only Topics You Actually Need (& How to Learn Them)

If you are aiming for semiconductor jobs in the UK it is easy to assume you need a PhD level maths toolkit. In practice most roles do not. Whether you are targeting device engineering, process engineering, yield engineering, product engineering, test, reliability, RF, analogue, digital design, EDA, packaging or applications engineering, the maths you actually use clusters into a few workhorse areas. This guide strips it back to the topics that genuinely help you get hired & perform well on the job: Exponents, logs & “physics curves” (Arrhenius style behaviour, subthreshold, leakage) Calculus in plain English (rates, gradients, differential equations intuition) Device electrostatics & transport basics (Poisson equation intuition, drift & diffusion) Complex numbers for AC & RF (impedance, phasors, frequency response) Signals maths (Fourier intuition, bandwidth, noise density) Probability & statistics for manufacturing (SPC, DOE, yield models, reliability basics) Basic optimisation habits (fitting models, tuning trade-offs, making decisions with data) You will also get a 6 week plan, portfolio projects & a resources section you can follow without getting pulled into unnecessary theory.