Let’s translate the corporate blueprint. Honeywell is hunting for a Lead Automation Engineer to architect complex robotic control systems from a remote setup. You aren’t writing software that lives in the cloud; you are writing mission-critical logic that moves thousands of pounds of steel on physical factory floors. This is a high-liability architecture mandate. You will bridge the unforgiving laws of mechanical physics with advanced PLC programming, carrying the ultimate responsibility for both operational throughput and human safety in large-scale industrial environments.
Hardware Liability & Digital Twin Architecture
Designing industrial automation remotely introduces a massive technical challenge: you cannot simply push code to production and roll it back if it fails. A bug in your logic doesn’t crash a browser; it crashes a $500,000 robotic arm into a conveyor belt. Your primary defense mechanism is the “Digital Twin.” You will lead a distributed engineering team to rigorously simulate, stress-test, and validate complex material handling workflows in a virtual environment before a single piece of hardware is powered on at the client site.
Control Logic & Tactical Execution
- Mission-Critical PLC Architecture: Architect and deploy bulletproof logic structures for complex robotic cells. Your code must account for hardware latency, sensor failure, and unpredictable human variables on the floor.
- Digital Twin Validation: Heavily utilize advanced simulation software to create high-fidelity virtual replicas of the hardware. If your simulation tolerances are loose, the physical deployment will be a disaster.
- Mechanical Friction Resolution: Act as the ultimate technical referee between the software developers and the mechanical engineers, resolving integration bottlenecks where physical constraints meet code limitations.
- Distributed Code Governance: Lead strict, uncompromising code reviews for junior automation engineers, ensuring all PLC and robotic logic adheres to absolute safety and industrial standards.
The Technical Arsenal
- The Industrial Pedigree: 7+ years of deep, battle-tested experience in industrial automation. You must have a history of commissioning large-scale systems from the ground up, not just maintaining legacy code.
- Tier-1 Platform Fluency: Absolute, advanced proficiency in enterprise PLC environments (Rockwell/Allen-Bradley, Siemens) and heavy robotics programming (FANUC, ABB).
- Systems Engineering Baseline: A Bachelor’s degree in Electrical, Mechanical, or Computer Engineering is required to mathematically understand the physical forces your code is controlling.
Remote Leverage & The Home Lab Advantage
This role offers a masterclass in geographical arbitrage for industrial engineers, decoupling top-tier manufacturing salaries from the requirement to live next to a noisy factory.
- Base Compensation: $135,000 – $165,000 USD / Year. A highly competitive band, maximizing your purchasing power since you can execute this role from a lower-cost geography.
- The “Home Lab” Goldmine: Honeywell furnishes your remote office with the testing hardware and expensive enterprise software licenses (simulation/PLC platforms) needed to do the job. This is a massive, often overlooked perk that keeps your technical skills razor-sharp at the company’s expense.
- Resume Equity: Architecting automated systems for a giant like Honeywell is a fast-track credibility stamp for future Principal Engineer or Automation Director roles.
Deployment Logistics & The Travel Crucible
- The Remote/Commissioning Trade-Off
- Location: Remote (Tethered to Phoenix, AZ). While you design and simulate from the comfort of your home lab, the “15% travel” is the crucible. You will fly to manufacturing sites to oversee final commissioning, debugging physical hardware under immense pressure while the client’s production line is halted.
- Travel Logistics
- No relocation required. You maintain your current residency, and Honeywell fully funds the travel, per diems, and logistics for all required site-integration visits.