Who we are
We design and manufacture aftermarket parts for trucks and SUVs. Two product lines today:
- DashSkinz — replacement dash faceplates, LED upgrades, and lens covers for '92–'96 Ford F-Series and Broncos
- HyperVolt — factory-fit MagSafe phone chargers for 2014–2018 GMC and Chevy trucks (with more vehicle applications launching soon)
We're a small, fast-growing shop. We're moving into a new facility this month and rolling out one-piece-flow manufacturing. We have a pipeline of new products waiting for the right person to build them.
The role
We're hiring a maker, not an engineer. You don't need a degree. You need to be the kind of person who lives in Fusion 360 and a printer farm, can wire up a Raspberry Pi project on a Saturday, and knows the difference between a properly soldered joint and a cold one.
You'll own product development end-to-end: measuring vehicles, designing in CAD, prototyping, integrating small electronics, testing for real-world use, and handing off production-ready designs and documentation to our manufacturing team. The prototypes you build will become real products selling every day to truck owners across North America.
What you'll do
- Take a product from "we should make one for the Ram 1500" to a tested, documented, ready-for-production design
- 3D model parts in Fusion 360 and iterate prototypes on our printer farm
- Build the small electronics inside our products — wiring, soldering, integrating microcontrollers (HyperVolt charging boards, LED systems, future sensor and electronics products)
- Use Raspberry Pi and microcontrollers for shop floor tooling (test rigs, jigs, monitoring) and forward-looking R&D projects
- Source components and parts from suppliers
- Test prototypes for fit, function, and durability — heat, vibration, vehicle install, daily use
- Document everything: BOMs, CAD files, drawings, assembly instructions, work instructions — so production can run it without you in the room
- Help us decide what to build next based on what's possible and what's profitable
What we're looking for
- Maker mindset. You have a Prusa or Bambu at home, a soldering iron on your desk, and a project on the go right now
- Fusion 360 fluency (or another parametric CAD tool with willingness to switch)
- Hands-on 3D printing experience — FDM, ideally also resin
- Strong small-electronics chops — hand soldering (including SMD), board-level troubleshooting, reading schematics, comfortable with a multimeter and ideally an oscilloscope
- Raspberry Pi / Arduino / microcontroller comfort — you've shipped working projects you can show us
- Mechanical aptitude — you can take apart a dash and put it back together
- DFM thinking — you understand the gap between "prints once" and "manufacturable in volume"
- Obsessively organized — files named properly, revisions tracked, documentation written as you go, not at the end
- Self-directed — you take a one-line brief and run with it
Bonus points
- Component-level board repair or microsoldering experience
- Instrument cluster repair experience — diagnosing, repairing, or calibrating automotive gauge clusters (this is a service line we're building, and the right person could help shape it and eventually train others)
- EEPROM read/write, ECU work, or hands-on experience with automotive electronics diagnostics
- PCB design experience (KiCad, EasyEDA) — even hobby-level
- DFM experience — designed something that actually got made in volume
- Automotive background or strong personal interest in trucks/cars
- Experience sourcing from JLCPCB, AliExpress, or overseas suppliers
- Resin printing for cosmetic prototypes and master patterns
- Comfortable teaching others — this role may grow into a training/education function as we expand the cluster repair service line
The setup
- In-person at our new Lethbridge facility
- Flexible hours — part-time or full-time depending on the person. Hourly rate based on experience. $22-$30/ hr.
- Founder-led company, no bureaucracy, decisions get made in the room
- You'll see your designs being installed in customer trucks within months of finishing them
- Real impact — your work will be a meaningful to companies goals.
How to apply
Email [email protected] with the following:
- A 30-second video introducing yourself and your experience with 3D printing, small electronics, and CAD design. Phone camera is fine — we care about how you communicate, not production value.
- A short paragraph about a project you've built — what was it, why did you build it, what went wrong, what did you learn? Include photos or links to your work if you have them.
Cover letters and resumes are fine but optional. The video and project description are what we'll review first.
Pay: From $50,000.00 per year
Benefits:
- Casual dress
- Dental care
- On-site parking
Work Location: In person