Software Engineer, Engine Telemetry & Observability
Listed on 2026-05-22
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Software Development
Software Engineer, DevOps
A jet engine on a test stand throws off data the way it throws off heat. Thousands of channels, tens of thousands of samples per second, every one of them telling you something about whether the engine is about to do what it's supposed to do or something a lot more interesting. The test team has to make decisions in real time, with that data on a screen in front of them, while the engine is running.
The software that puts it there is not a dashboard. It is part of the test.
At Boom we are building Symphony — the engine that will power our aircraft and gas turbines — in Denver, at a pace and cost point the industry says is impossible. We are building our telemetry and observability stack ourselves because the off‑the‑shelf aerospace test tools are slow‑moving, expensive, hard to customize, and built for an era before AI was part of the stack.
We need a platform that evolves at the speed our test cadence demands.
We are hiring Software Engineers to own the tools the test team lives in. Telviz, our real‑time visualization platform. Boombox, our post‑event analysis suite. The ingest pipelines that move 200 kHz streams off the stand without dropping samples or losing time correlation. You will not ship UI over the wall. You will be on console during tests, watching engineers use what you built, fixing it between runs, and learning enough about the physics to know when a signal is lying.
Whatyou’ll do
- Own pieces of Telviz and Boombox end‑to‑end, from raw ingest through the visualization an engineer is staring at while the engine spins, with you on console during the test
- Ship real code in your first week. Ship a visualization or pipeline improvement the test team uses by the end of your first month
- Reason about throughput, fidelity, and time correlation as first‑class concerns. Work with high‑density storage formats (Parquet, Avro, HDF5, netCDF) and in‑transit formats (Arrow, Protobuf, Ethernet‑based protocols). A dropped sample is not a UI bug
- Help scale the platform from internal test infrastructure into the data backbone of a deployed product, as Superpower units ship to customers
- Write the boring observability, replay tooling, and runbooks that make the next test smoother
- Real software engineering experience in at least one of Go, Rust, C++, or production Python, with range across the stack
- Scar tissue from working with high‑volume, real‑time, or time‑correlated data. Observability platforms, trading systems, motor sport telemetry, robotics, AV, hyperscale infrastructure — domain matters less than the instincts
- Familiarity with the numerical computing toolchain engineers actually use (Num Py, Sci Py, pandas) and an understanding of why time series databases exist
- Genuine curiosity about the physical systems behind the data, and comfort embedding with the engineers who run them
- You believe the test stand is the most interesting room in the building
- You have strong opinions, held loosely, and you'd rather be proven wrong today than right in six months
The Base Salary Range for this position is $118,000 - $149,000 per year. Actual salaries will vary based on factors including but not limited to location, experience, and performance. The range listed is just one component of Boom’s total rewards package for employees. Other rewards may include long‑term incentives/equity, a flexible PTO policy, and many other progressive benefits.
ITAR RequirementTo conform to U.S. Government aerospace technology export regulations (ITAR and EAR), applicant must be a U.S. citizen, lawful permanent resident of the U.S., protected individual as defined by 8 U.S.C 1324b(a)(3), or eligible to obtain the required authorizations from the U.S. Department of State. Learn more about ITAR here.
Boom is an equal opportunity employer and we value diversity. All employment is decided on the basis of qualifications, merit and business need.
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