Aviation Engineers.
Aviation engineers serving commercial, general aviation, and airport infrastructure — airframes, propulsion, avionics, and FAA-regulated facility design.
Aviation engineering in the United States.
Aviation engineering covers airframe and powerplant work, avionics and systems integration, MRO engineering, and the civil, structural, and electrical disciplines that deliver runways, terminals, hangars, and FAA-compliant facilities. Many scopes require state-licensed P.E.s coordinating with FAA/DER authority.
VectorCore aggregates licensed aerospace, mechanical, civil, and electrical engineers actively practicing on aviation programs and airport infrastructure nationwide.
Post an aviation scope to the marketplace, or run the AI Estimator for a ROM cost and schedule on a facility, MRO, or systems project.
Licensed engineers active in aviation
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Disciplines that lead aviation work
Hiring an engineer for aviation work
How do I find a licensed engineer for a aviation project?+
Search VectorCore for P.E.-licensed engineers in the disciplines that Aviation projects typically engage — aerospace, mechanical, electrical, civil. Every record links back to the state board for live verification.
Do Aviation engineers need a Professional Engineer (P.E.) license?+
Any engineering work submitted to a U.S. building department, regulator, or owner typically must be sealed by a P.E. licensed in the state of the project. Aviation programs are no exception — confirm licensure in the relevant state before engagement.
What kind of work do Aviation engineers do?+
Aviation engineers serving commercial, general aviation, and airport infrastructure — airframes, propulsion, avionics, and FAA-regulated facility design.
Can I post a aviation engineering project on VectorCore?+
Yes — post a brief to the marketplace and licensed engineers and firms experienced in Aviation will submit proposals. Use the AI Estimator for a rough order-of-magnitude cost and schedule first.