Canada Rocket Company

Manufacturing and Materials Specialist

About Canada Rocket Company

About Canada Rocket Company 

Canada Rocket Company is developing Canada's first medium-lift launch vehicle.  

We are a team of veterans from SpaceX, Blue Origin, Rocket Lab, ArianeGroup, Pangea Propulsion, Tesla, MDA, and more, bringing over a century of combined launch and space systems experience back to Canada.  

Our mission is to provide reliable, independent access to space for Canada and its allies in a rapidly expanding global market.  

Our approach is defined by pragmatic engineering:  

  • We utilize a 750 kN engine that scales from light- to medium-lift via engine clustering.  
  • We lean on simple, proven technologies to reach orbit faster, avoiding the pitfalls of complex or novel designs.  
  • We test early and often, catching problems on the bench instead of at the pad.  

Backed by $20M in funding secured within our first four months, including the largest all-Canadian seed round in the sector and an $8.3M Department of National Defence grant, we are moving with the speed and institutional backing required to meet Canada’s orbital launch needs.  

About the role

Canada Rocket Company is building a sovereign launch capability for Canada. We're looking for a Manufacturing and Materials Engineer to lead the selection, qualification, control, and industrialization of the materials and fabrication processes that turn our vehicle designs into reliable, flight-ready hardware. This role sits at the intersection of materials science, engineering, production, quality, and supply chain, with responsibility spanning material systems, process definition, producibility, inspection, and failure investigation.  

You will work across structures, propulsion, fluids, and integration to select and qualify metallic materials, define and optimize fabrication methods, establish process controls, and resolve real-world manufacturing challenges as hardware moves from development to flight-ready build  

What you'll do

  • Work with structural and mechanical engineers to define and execute the material and manufacturing engineering approach for launch vehicle hardware, spanning material selection, process development, fabrication planning, producibility, industrialization, and build support.  
  • Select, qualify, and control material systems for vehicle applications.  
  • Develop and maintain material specifications, process specifications, qualification plans, and workflows.  
  • Characterize and evaluate material behaviour relevant to design and manufacturing.  
  • Define, develop, optimize, and control fabrication processes for hardware.  
  • Develop manufacturing plans, traveler documents, work instructions, build sequences, and process flows that enable safe, repeatable, efficient fabrication of flight hardware. 
  • Drive design-for-manufacture and design-for-assembly reviews with engineering teams.  
  • Partner closely with design, structures, propulsion, fluids, and integration teams to ensure metallic hardware concepts are aligned with real process capability, source availability, and production constraints.  
  • Support development and maturation of key manufacturing methods  
  • Work with operations and supply chain teams to identify, qualify, and mature suppliers for critical raw materials, forgings, and fabricated components.  
  • Support sourcing decisions with an understanding of material pedigree, domestic or allied source considerations, lead times, certifiability, traceability, and long-term scalability.  
  • Lead or support failure analysis and manufacturing investigations  
  • Resolve shop-floor and production issues including non-conformances, rework paths, process escapes, yield issues, and fabrication anomalies.  
  • Maintain material databases, process records, and traceability systems to support engineering decisions, manufacturing control, and program execution.  
  • Contribute to technical reviews, trade studies, and development planning related to materials, manufacturing methods, production scaling, and hardware risk reduction. 

Qualifications

Required 

  • Experience in manufacturing engineering, materials engineering, or process engineering for metallic aerospace hardware or similarly demanding hardware environments.  
  • Strong understanding of metallic material systems, including how alloy choice, product form, temper or heat treatment condition, and processing history affect performance, manufacturability, durability, and cost.  
  • Experience developing, utilizing, supporting, or optimizing fabrication processes for hardware ( machining, welding, forming, joining, heat treatment, or assembly).  
  • Strong understanding of the interaction between materials and manufacturing methods, especially where fabrication route directly affects strength, fatigue performance, distortion, residual stress, crack initiation, dimensional control, or inspectability.  
  • Experience creating or managing manufacturing documentation, process flows, work instructions, build plans, or fabrication sequences.  
  • Strong engineering fundamentals related to material behaviour, manufacturing process capability, producibility, and practical hardware realization.  
  • Ability to work cross-functionally with design engineering, production, operations, suppliers, and adjacent technical teams in a fast-paced hardware environment.  
  • Strong communication and technical judgment, with the ability to make sound decisions that balance performance, manufacturability, schedule, scalability, and cost.

Preferred 

  • Direct experience with launch vehicle, spacecraft, propulsion, pressure vessel, tank, thrust structure, manifold, or other high-performance aerospace hardware.  
  • Hands-on experience with aluminum alloy structures, welded assemblies, machined components, formed shells, machined manifolds, pressure-containing hardware, or thermally demanding metallic components.  
  • Experience with welding process development or qualification, including fusion welding, friction stir welding, brazing, or other relevant aerospace joining methods.  
  • Experience with both additive manufacturing processes and traditional machining and joining methods.  
  • Experience with source qualification and supplier development for metallic raw material and fabrication processes.  
  • Familiarity with NDT/NDE methods relevant to metallic and composite hardware. 
  • Familiarity with AS9100, NASA, ECSS, or similar aerospace process and manufacturing environments.  
  • Bachelor's or advanced degree in materials engineering, mechanical engineering, manufacturing engineering, aerospace engineering, or a related field. 

Engineering

Toronto, Canada

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