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FluidStack

Electrical Commissioning Engineer, R&D

Austin, TX$197k–$227kfulltimemidAdded today

About this role

Fluidstack seeks an Electrical Commissioning Engineer to commission electrical systems for AI compute infrastructure, including distribution, protection, and power quality verification. You'll execute integrated tests, analyze relay and load data, and support factory FAT processes for modular electrical systems.

What you'll do

  • Commission electrical systems including distribution, protection, and power quality verification to design specifications
  • Execute and improve functional and integrated test scripts, identify gaps, and refine reference packages
  • Analyze relay operations, transfer tests, and load data against engineering studies
  • Support electrical FAT processes for modules in factory environments before shipment
  • Catch and resolve design or settings errors during commissioning
  • Perform switching, transfer, and protection tests with discipline and safety compliance

What they're looking for

  • Electrical system commissioning for data centers or industrial plants
  • Relay protection testing and analysis
  • Power quality data interpretation
  • Event record analysis
  • Electrical safety in energized environments
  • Test procedure development and execution
  • NETA testing
  • Generator and UPS integrated testing
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FluidStack

FluidStack builds AI infrastructure at scale, developing data centers and warehouse operations designed to handle gigawatt-capacity compute deployment. The company is hiring for warehouse engineers, data center operations specialists, product engineers, and people leaders to support rapid infrastructure expansion across multiple sites.

View all jobs at FluidStack

Likely interview questions

  • Walk us through your most complex electrical commissioning project—what issues did you find and how did you resolve them?
  • Describe your experience reading event records and power quality data. Can you give an example where you identified a design or settings problem?