Evolito Ltd builds electric propulsion systems for aerospace - axial flux motors with a yokeless design and segmented magnet architecture, engineered for class-leading power density and efficiency. Founded in 2018 in the UK, the company targets a market where weight, torque density, and certifiability aren't nice-to-haves but hard constraints: eVTOL, UAVs, and general aviation. The hardware is the product - lithium and copper, not software abstraction layers.
The threat model here is certification. Evolito has secured Design Organisation Approval from the UK Civil Aviation Authority and is progressing toward type certification with concurrent validation from the FAA and EASA. That regulatory pipeline is the moat and the bottleneck - failures in aerospace propulsion aren't theoretical, and getting airworthiness sign-off across three jurisdictions means engineering rigor has to be baked into every stage, not bolted on at the end.
The technical domains sit at the intersection of electric motor design, power electronics, and aerospace-grade systems engineering. If you're working security or embedded systems integrity in that stack, the attack surface is physical and digital: firmware in motor controllers, supply chain provenance for critical components, and the integrity of certification data flowing between regulatory bodies. The systems are lightweight and high-power; the engineering culture presumably has to match.