Sr. Electrical Engineer (medical device)
Role: Sr. Electrical EngineerLocation: Irvine, CA 92618Duration: Long termThis is a backfill rolle need someone who can join immediately. This is an integration-focused effort tied to bringing external/legacy medical device products in line with the client’s internal standards. The work is less about net-new design and more about design remediation, compliance alignment, and product integration. What We’re Looking For Please prioritize candidates with: Strong electrical or systems engineering backgroundExperience with design remediation, product refinement, and testing/validationFamiliarity with regulated environments (medical device preferred)Exposure to design controls, risk management, FMEA, and documentationHands-on skills in troubleshooting, test methods, and possibly fixture designTools experience like Altium, LTspice, or similar is a plusStrong communication skills (this role is cross-functional and documentation-heavy) Absolute Requirements BS in Electrical Engineering (or closely related field)Minimum 4+ years of relevant engineering experience (or 2+ with MS)Proven experience with electrical design documentation (not just hands-on work)Demonstrated involvement in testing, validation, or design verificationAbility to analyze technical data and make recommendationsStrong written and verbal communication skillsWillingness and ability to work onsite 5 days/week in Irvine, CAExperience working on existing/legacy designs (not purely new product development) Key Responsibilities (High-Level) Identify and close compliance gaps vs. internal SOPs and standardsSupport design updates, testing, and validation activitiesContribute to risk analysis (FMEA/hazard analysis)Produce clear engineering documentation for knowledge transferCollaborate with suppliers and cross-functional teams Important Notes This is a hands-on, onsite roleCandidates should be comfortable working with existing/legacy designs, not just new developmentStrong attention to detail and ability to work through ambiguous or incomplete inputs is key