Curtiss-Wright DS, Inc. traces its origins to 1929, when aviation pioneers Glenn Curtiss and the Wright brothers joined forces. Today, the company employs more than 9,000 people across 70+ locations worldwide, designing and building sensors, controls, actuators, and integrated subsystems for applications where failure carries serious consequences - fighter jets, naval vessels, nuclear power plants, and space exploration vehicles among them.
The company's technical work spans a broad range of demanding environments. Its products are deployed in commercial aviation, military combat zones, nuclear energy facilities, and space platforms. Core engineering disciplines include embedded computing, nuclear instrumentation, precision engineering, surface treatments, and industrial technologies, in addition to the sensors-to-subsystems hardware the company is known for.
Curtiss-Wright structures its work around mission-critical reliability - the kind of engineering standard familiar to those who have served in environments where equipment performance is not negotiable. The company supplies systems that protect military personnel, support safe nuclear energy production, and keep aircraft and naval vessels operational in demanding conditions.
With a global footprint and a workforce built around engineers and technical specialists, Curtiss-Wright operates across the aerospace, defense, power generation, and industrial markets. More information is available at curtisswright.com.