Torus designs and manufactures distributed energy systems—solar, battery storage, and flywheel systems—for residential, commercial, and industrial customers. The tech stack reveals a hardware-centric operation: CAD tools (SolidWorks), industrial protocols (CAN, I2C, UART), HMI systems, and now adopting PLCs, indicating a push toward deeper automation and real-time system control. Active hiring across engineering and manufacturing (34 of 52 roles) mirrors the operational focus on scaling both design and production capacity.
Torus builds mesh energy infrastructure—a distributed power architecture that combines solar generation, battery storage (BESS), and flywheel energy storage (FESS) systems. The company serves residential, commercial, industrial, and utility-scale customers. Operations span design (SolidWorks, Primavera), manufacturing setup and equipment upgrades, installation across multiple geographies, and customer support. The engineering and manufacturing departments carry the majority of hiring velocity, reflecting scaling pressures in both product development and production throughput. Pain points center on supply-chain cost control, cross-site project delivery, and hardware-software integration—typical challenges for hardware-first energy companies managing complex multi-site deployments.
SolidWorks for CAD design, HMI and PLC systems for real-time control, and industrial communication protocols (CAN, I2C, UART) for hardware integration. AWS and Terraform support cloud infrastructure.
Residential, commercial, and industrial solar PV systems; battery energy storage systems (BESS) for C&I and utility scale; and flywheel energy storage (FESS) systems. Projects include both new installations and long-term equipment upgrades.
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