Systems Engineer - Communications and EW Resilience

Whiteley
3 days ago
Create job alert

Communications & EW Resilience Engineer

Southampton / Portsmouth - Hybrid / Remote

Help build the communications and navigation systems that keep long‑range autonomous aircraft flying - even under jamming, spoofing, and real‑world EW threats.

We're looking for a hands‑on engineer who can take ownership of the full comms chain, from radios and antennas to integration, testing, and flight‑proven performance.

What You'll Do

Build resilient GNSS and comms systems for autonomous UAVs
Integrate radios, antennas, and multi‑path links (RF, SATCOM, 4G)
Mitigate jamming/spoofing and improve EW resilience
Lead lab, ground, and flight testing - including controlled EW trials
Track real‑world EW tactics and apply them to system design

What You Bring

STEM degree (2:1+)
Experience delivering comms or EW‑resilient systems
Strong RF, GNSS, and system‑integration skills
Practical experience with radios, antennas, C/C++ or Python
Delivery‑focused mindset and ability to own multi‑domain problems

Details

Full‑time, permanent
Hybrid (Southampton / Portsmouth) or Remote

Related Jobs

View all jobs

UAV Engineer

Product Safety Engineer

Engineering Manager Aviation & Robotics

Medical Field Service Engineer

Medical Field Service Engineer

Medical Field Service Engineer, X-ray & Ultrasound

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.

What Hiring Managers Look for First in UAV Job Applications (UK Guide)

Whether you’re aiming for roles in UAV design, robotics/controls engineering, autonomy & computer vision, flight test & certification, embedded systems, operations, ground control software, systems integration or regulatory compliance, the way you present yourself in an application can make or break your chances — and that often happens before the hiring manager reads past your first few lines. In the UK UAV/jobs market, recruiters and hiring managers scan applications rapidly. They look for relevant experience, measurable delivery, technical credibility, domain awareness and safety/regulatory understanding — often making a decision within the first 10–20 seconds. This guide breaks down exactly what hiring managers look for first in UAV applications, why those signals matter, and how to structure your CV, portfolio and cover letter so you get noticed — not filtered out.

The Skills Gap in UAV Jobs: What Universities Aren’t Teaching

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) — commonly known as drones — are among the fastest-growing technologies globally. From infrastructure inspection and agriculture to emergency response, surveying, logistics and defence, UAVs are transforming how organisations gather data, deliver services and improve efficiency. In the UK, demand for UAV professionals is increasing rapidly. Yet despite a growing number of graduates with engineering, robotics or aerospace backgrounds, employers continue to report a persistent problem: Many graduates are not ready for real UAV jobs. This is not a reflection of intelligence or academic effort. It is a widening skills gap between what universities teach and what employers actually need in the UAV sector. This article explores that gap in depth — what universities do well, where programmes fall short, why the divide exists, what employers actually want, and how jobseekers can bridge the gap to build a successful career in UAVs.

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

UAVs (drones) have moved far beyond hobby flying. In the UK, they are now used every day for surveying, infrastructure inspection, construction progress, environmental monitoring, emergency response, film production, agriculture, offshore work & security. That growth has created a wide range of UAV job opportunities — and many of the most realistic routes into the sector are well suited to career switchers in their 30s, 40s & 50s. This article gives you a straight UK reality check on UAV careers: what roles genuinely exist, what training you really need, how long it takes to become employable, where the money is, what employers actually look for & whether age matters (usually far less than people assume).