Mechatronics Internship Summer 2026
Mechatronics Intern (Summer 2026) — Build the Future of Manufacturing
Fabri is a funded hard-tech startup re-imagining how foundries operate—from raw material to finished part—through a fully digital, end-to-end system. This summer, we’re opening the doors to a hands-on builder who wants more than just another internship.
If you’re the kind of person who would rather prototype than theorize, debug instead of defer, and see your work running on real equipment—not just in simulation—this role is for you.
As a Mechatronics Intern, you’ll join a tight-knit engineering team working on Phase 1 of our digital foundry. You won’t be sidelined—you’ll help design, build, and refine the systems that make it all work.
What You’ll Actually Do
- Design and build electro-mechanical systems that operate in a real foundry environment
- Rapidly move from concept → breadboard → PCB (and iterate just as fast)
- Work with sensors, embedded systems, and communication protocols—often ones you’ve never seen before
- Troubleshoot across disciplines: mechanical, electrical, and software
- Contribute directly to automation and process control systems that are core to Fabri’s platform
What Makes This Different
- Your work won’t sit in a demo bin—it’ll be used
- You’ll have real ownership, not just tasks
- You’ll learn by doing, not by watching
- You’ll be surrounded by people who build fast and expect the same
What We’re Looking For
- Current student or recent graduate in Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Robotics, Manufacturing, or a related field
- Strong hands-on experience building electro-mechanical systems
- CAD proficiency and solid general computing skills
- Curiosity, initiative, and a bias toward action
Details
📍 On-site: 35 Dunham Road, Billerica, MA
💰 Paid internship (Summer 2026)
Due to ITAR regulations, candidates must be U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents
This is a chance to step into a real engineering environment, contribute to systems that matter, and leave the summer with experience you can actually point to—and explain.
If that sounds like your kind of challenge, apply.