Newport News Shipbuilding, A Division of HII · 4 hours ago
ENGINEER MECHANICAL 2
Newport News Shipbuilding is the largest industrial employer in Virginia, specializing in the design, construction, and refueling of U.S. Navy nuclear aircraft carriers and submarines. The role involves researching, planning, designing, and developing mechanical products and systems, providing hands-on support for the construction of Reactor Plant structures for the Columbia Class Submarine program.
Defense & Space
Responsibilities
Researches, plans, designs and develops mechanical products and systems such as instruments, controls, robots, engines, machines and mechanical, thermal hydraulic or heat transfer systems for production, transmission, measurement, and use of energy
Applies research to the planning, design, development, and testing of mechanical and/or electromechanical systems, instruments, controls, engines, and/or machines
Qualification
Required
Bachelor's Degree and 2 years of relevant exempt experience
Master's Degree and 0 year of relevant professional experience
Newport News Shipbuilding requires a Bachelor's Degree in engineering from an ABET accredited program
Effective written and verbal communication skills
Problem Solving
Critical Thinking
Technical Writing
Experience with Microsoft Office Programs
Preferred
A general understanding of the reactor plant construction process
ship/shop check experience
project management experience
Experience with various NNS shipbuilding programs (i.e. Teamcenter, SAP, i2, etc.) preferred
Benefits
Comprehensive benefits including: medical, prescription drug, dental and vision plan choices, on-site health centers, tele-medicine, wellness resources, employee assistance programs, savings plan options (401K), financial education and planning tools, life insurance, tuition reimbursement, employee discounts, early childhood and post-secondary education scholarships, and more.
Company
Newport News Shipbuilding, A Division of HII
For 137 years, the ships built at Newport News Shipbuilding, like the American shipbuilders who built them, have served our nation in peace and war, in times of adversity and in times of abundance.