Korry designs and manufactures human-machine interfaces for aerospace platforms—switches, displays, night-vision filters, and cockpit controls integrated across optics, electronics, and software. The tech stack (PTC Creo, Windchill, Xpedition, PSpice, Jira) reflects a hardware-driven design and manufacturing operation. Current hiring velocity is accelerating with 10 engineering roles open, signaling either new product ramp or certification workload; the project list centers on avionics system certification, reliability analysis, and manufacturing process innovation—typical of a supplier scaling to handle regulatory and performance demands.
Korry Electronics manufactures human-machine interface solutions—cockpit controls, displays, switches, and filters—for aerospace OEMs and operators. Founded in 1937, the company produces components found across commercial and military aircraft fleets. The business spans design (optics, electronics, software, mechanical packaging, human factors) and manufacturing operations. Customers are aircraft manufacturers, defense primes, and operators. The company is publicly listed and based in Everett, Washington, with 201–500 employees. Current focus areas include new product introduction, avionics certification, field reliability tracking, and manufacturing automation.
PTC Creo (3D CAD), PTC Windchill (PLM), Xpedition (PCB design), and PSpice (circuit simulation). These are standard for aerospace hardware design and manufacturing.
Active projects include avionics system certification and reliability analysis, new product introduction, manufacturing process automation, and field reliability tracking. Sales process improvements and deal acceleration are also underway.
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