Boom Supersonic is building the Overture supersonic airliner and the Superpower gas turbine — machines that require some of the most demanding manufacturing in modern industry.
That only works if the hardware meets design intent. Right now, we have the inspection capability to check parts. What we don't have is the system that makes inspection credible, repeatable, and scalable. That's what this role exists to build.
Not a traditional quality engineering role
At most companies, a quality engineer inherits a system — procedures, reports, calibration programs, nonconformance workflows. They learn how it works and keep it running.
This is not that job.
We have an inspection team executing inspection work and machinists making hardware. What we don't have is the architecture that sits above it — the inspection standards, the reports, the traceability framework, the nonconformance process, the calibration program. You're building that layer from scratch, and you're doing it while hardware is actively moving through the shop.
What you'll do
This job is demanding
You will walk into a shop where good work is being done but the quality system around it is underdeveloped. There will be parts that fail inspection and no established process for what happens next.
Your job is to build the system that handles all of that — without slowing the shop down or creating bureaucracy that gets in the way of building hardware.
That requires technical depth, judgment, and the ability to earn credibility on the floor rather than enforce compliance from a desk.
You probably have
CMM programming experience is a plus. It's not a requirement
Why Boom