Engineering with integrity, precision, and care
I'm an electronic design engineer with a genuine passion for building reliable, well‑crafted hardware. I've always enjoyed the process of taking an idea, shaping it into something tangible, and seeing it come to life. My background is rooted in hands‑on engineering, from early concept development to fully tested, production‑ready designs. Over the years, I've learned that the best results come from taking the time to do things properly, testing thoroughly, and never cutting corners for the sake of speed or cost. Good engineering doesn't have to be slow or complicated, but it does need to be thoughtful and flexible and most importantly ready to adapt when something unexpected appears along the way. Real engineering takes patience and curiosity with the willingness to test, challenge assumptions, and refine until it simply feels right, both on paper and in practice.
It's hard not to notice how many products today look premium and cost a fortune but fall apart at the slightest touch. Sometimes I wonder if those who designed them ever really tried using them. That kind of design, impressive on the surface but fragile underneath, is exactly what I want to avoid. A good product should feel solid and dependable, not just when it's new, but years down the road.
I started Salitronic because I wanted to do things differently. Too often, design projects are rushed, testing is skipped, and decisions are made purely to save cost. I wanted to create a service built on the opposite principles: treating engineering as a craft, guided by integrity, precision, and long‑term reliability. Each new project is a chance to build something that genuinely works and continues to work, something that feels right, both technically and ethically.
Every project I take on gets the same care and attention to detail, because when my name is tied to a design, I want it to represent pride and trust. I don't just think about the client's needs, I think about the people who will use the final product. Someone is spending their money and expecting a product that works, and I take that seriously. I want them to feel that their money was well spent.
Engineering should be approachable. It shouldn't feel distant or intimidating. Communication should be open, honest, and human, whether it's a quick chat about an idea or a detailed review of a design. Many of the best projects I've worked on started from simple, spontaneous conversations or even a quick sketch sent over email. Whatever stage you're at, you should feel completely comfortable reaching out. There's no pressure, no gatekeeping, just a real conversation about how to make an idea work.
If you have an idea, a challenge, or a product that needs electronics to bring it to life, this is an open invitation to get in touch. The first step is always easy: a quick message, a call, or a discussion to explore what's possible. No matter the project size or background, the goal is always the same: to make collaboration natural, professional, and genuinely enjoyable.
Founder & Electronic Design Engineer