Environmental simulation and flight-training equipment manufacturer
ETC manufactures specialized simulators and environmental-control systems for aerospace training, disaster response, and biomedical research. The tech stack is classic mechanical engineering—AutoCAD, ANSYS, Abaqus, NASTRAN—reflecting hardware-design maturity rather than software infrastructure. Current hiring is engineering-heavy with mid-level focus, signaling either design-capacity gaps or scaling of a specific product line; manufacturing-process validation is the only flagged project, suggesting internal operational tightening around cost efficiency and quality control.
Environmental Tectonics Corp manufactures simulators and environmental systems across four core verticals: flight-training devices for pilot aeromedical preparation, disaster-management simulation platforms, steam and ethylene-oxide sterilizers for medical facilities, and automotive and environmental test chambers. Founded in 1969, the company is publicly traded and operates from Southampton, Pennsylvania with 201–500 employees. Products are sold into defense and aerospace (military and civilian pilot training), first-responder agencies, hospital and lab networks, and automotive OEMs. The company emphasizes readiness and safety outcomes for end users across these sectors.
ETC's primary design tools are Autodesk AutoCAD, ANSYS, Abaqus, and NASTRAN—all computational mechanics and CAD platforms typical of mechanical and aerospace hardware engineering.
ETC makes flight simulators for pilot training, disaster-response simulation systems, biomedical sterilizers, hyperbaric chambers, and automotive environmental test chambers—spanning aerospace, defense, medical, and industrial sectors.
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