Amazon.com Services LLC

Hardware Development, subsidiaries

AdvancedManufacturingEng,AME-RDPI

$117–160k Westboro, Wisconsin, United States FULL TIME
Market Sentiment
HIGH DEMAND

Neural analysis suggests this role is
optimal for Mid candidates.

The Brief

“Advanced Manufacturing Eng, AME-RDPI at Amazon.com Services LLC. Skills: Advanced Manufacturing, Design for X, Manufacturing capabilities. Provide DFx guidance. Provide feedback on electromechanical designs”

What You'll Achieve.

Manufactured at scale with high quality; Delivered on-time

Industry & Context.

Hardware Development, subsidiaries
Problems you'll solve

Root cause analysis; Technical problem solving

What They're Looking For.

Must Have

4+ years mechanical engineering, Experience with prototyping, Experience with implementation

Nice to Have

Knowledge of SolidWorks simulation, Knowledge of Ansys Finite Element analysis tools, Experience in design of complex mechanical products, Experience in design of complex equipment at volume

What You'll Do.

Provide feedback on electromechanical designs

Guide best practices on manufacturing tolerances

Launch tooling with accelerated schedules

Review external production processes

Qualify production processes

Drive internal PFMEA reviews

Drive external PFMEA reviews

Solve technical problems across manufacturing commodities

Mentor design engineers

Evaluate Engineering Change Orders

Approve Engineering Change Orders

Conduct root cause analysis for production failures

Conduct root cause analysis for supplier failures

Conduct root cause analysis for field failures

How You'll Work.

Team & Collaboration

Mentoring team members; Mentoring design engineers

Process & Methodology

Accelerated schedules

Full Job Description

The Advanced Manufacturing team within Technical Operations and Product Scaling (TOPS) team as part of Robotics Delivery and Packaging Innovation organization serves as the critical bridge between product design and scaled manufacturing. Operating under the Design for Scale (DfS) framework, AME ensures that new automation products can be manufactured at scale with high quality and delivered on-time by establishing and validating manufacturing capabilities of scaled Contract Manufacturers. Key job responsibilities Advanced Manufacturing Engineers (AME) AME professionals are responsible for applying Design for X principles to influence product designs and transition automation solutions from design to production. Key responsibilities include: - Providing DFx guidance and feedback on electromechanical designs - Guiding best practices on manufacturing tolerances using Geometric Dimensioning and Tolerancing (GD&T) - Launching tooling with accelerated schedules - Reviewing external production processes and identifying/mitigating risks - Qualifying production processes based on dimensional data and control plans - Driving internal and external PFMEA reviews - Solving technical problems across manufacturing commodities - Mentoring team members and design engineers - Evaluating and approving Engineering Change Orders (ECOs) - Conducting root cause analysis for production, supplier, and field failures Basic Qualifications: - 4+ years of working in mechanical engineering or equivalent experience - Experience with prototyping and implementation Preferred Qualifications: - Knowledge of SolidWorks simulation or Ansys Finite Element analysis tools - Experience in the design of complex mechanical products and equipment at volume Amazon is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of protected veteran status, disability, or other legally protected status. Our inclusive culture empowers Amazonians to deliver the best results for our customers. If you have a

Free ATS check

Applying for this Advanced Manufacturing Eng, AME-RDPI role?

Most applicants get filtered before a human reads their resume. See if yours makes the cut.

ANONYMOUS · UNFILTERED

What do employees actually say about Amazon.com Services LLC?

Real rants from real employees. Read before you apply.

Read Company Rants →