Full-Time
Posted on 10/3/2025
End-to-end software-hardware digital manufacturing system
$157.2k - $273.6k/yr
Carson, CA, USA
In Person
On-site 4 days per week at Torrance, CA headquarters.
Divergent Technologies builds an end-to-end production system for digital manufacturing that combines software and hardware. Its Divergent Adaptive Production System (DAPS) lets clients design parts, 3D print them, and automatically assemble complex structures for sectors like automotive, aerospace, and defense. The system works by letting users optimize designs, reduce material use, and manufacture without large upfront capital investments, using modular production to speed up innovation and lower environmental impact. Divergent differentiates itself by offering a fully integrated, scalable workflow that goes from digital design to finished parts in one system, enabling faster iterations and sustainable manufacturing. The company’s goal is to change how complex structures are built in manufacturing, delivering scalable efficiency and greener production practices.
Company Size
201-500
Company Stage
Series E
Total Funding
$1B
Headquarters
Torrance, California
Founded
2014
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Divergent Technologies, a California-based digital manufacturing company, has closed a $290 million Series E round at a $2.3 billion valuation, led by Rochefort Asset Management. The funding comprises $250 million in equity and $40 million in debt. Founded in 2014, Divergent develops manufacturing hardware and software for aerospace, defence and automotive sectors. Its clients include Aston Martin, Bugatti, McLaren, General Atomics, Lockheed Martin and Raytheon. The company will use the capital to scale manufacturing capacity and support new product development. Divergent reported revenue growth of over five times in 2025 and introduced more than 200 new aerospace and defence part numbers in the first half of the year, bringing its total to over 600 unique parts across industries.
U.S. firms test Venom autonomous strike aircraft. Feb 18, 2026 Modified date: Feb 18, 2026 Key Points * Divergent Technologies and Mach Industries launched the Venom autonomous strike aircraft prototype developed from concept to flight readiness in 71 days. * The project demonstrates rapid aircraft development using digital manufacturing and modular systems aligned with U.S. missile and drone acquisition efforts. Divergent Technologies and Mach Industries announced on Feb. 17, 2026, in Los Angeles that they have jointly launched Venom, an autonomous strike aircraft prototype developed and brought to flight readiness in 71 days, demonstrating rapid hardware development enabled by digital manufacturing and modular system design. According to a joint announcement from the companies, the Venom aircraft serves as a flight demonstration platform designed to show how defense hardware can move from concept to operational prototype using software-driven engineering and production methods. The project combines Mach Industries' system architecture and avionics integration with Divergent's digital manufacturing technology. The prototype was developed using a modular open-systems architecture established by Mach Industries, which leveraged avionics and simulation tools derived from existing flight-proven technology stacks. Divergent executed the digital design and additive manufacturing of the aircraft's primary structure, including wings, fuselage, skins, and control surfaces, producing them as monolithic assemblies rather than traditional multi-part aerospace constructions. - ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW - Discover more Unmanned aerial vehicle "This partnership between Mach Industries and Divergent demonstrates a pivotal capability for the nation. By combining Mach's innovative systems with Divergent's revolutionary digital manufacturing platform, we've moved from concept to a flight-ready prototype in 71 days," said Alex Lovett, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of War for Mission Capabilities in the Office of the Under Secretary of War for Research and Engineering. "This isn't just an impressive metric - it's a direct enabler of our strategy to achieve affordable mass and support the SECWAR's 'Drone Dominance' vision. ODASW(P&E) is committed to sponsoring collaborations like this that accelerate rapid acquisition and deliver urgent, low-cost munitions to the warfighter." The companies said Venom was enabled by Divergent's Adaptive Production System (DAPS), a manufacturing approach that replaces complex multi-hundred-part assemblies with unified additively manufactured structures. As noted by the company, this process reduces overall part counts while accelerating production timelines and simplifying manufacturing workflows. "Going from inception to flight in 71 days is a clear demonstration of what's possible when Divergent's Adaptive Production System is utilized from day one. This is what production at the speed of relevance looks like," said Lukas Czinger, co-founder and chief executive officer of Divergent. "Most importantly, Divergent will drive the rapid scale-up of this system, producing thousands of airframes annually. Partnering with Mach has been an immediate win and reflects two mission-aligned, innovative companies executing at maximum pace." Mach Industries established baseline system requirements and conducted iterative testing using a shared simulation and control framework that allowed hardware and software development to proceed simultaneously. The companies said this parallel engineering model enabled accelerated validation cycles and reduced the timeline between initial design and first flight. "Over the last 18 months Mach has taken four products from concept to flight test through rapid iteration, and Divergent's adaptive tech stack has been instrumental in accelerating that iteration," said Ethan Thornton, founder and chief executive officer of Mach Industries. "Mach's selection for a production contract is the first of many opportunities to show not only speed to prototype, but speed to scaled manufacturing." Venom represents a prototype autonomous strike aircraft intended to demonstrate rapid acquisition concepts rather than an announced operational deployment. The platform integrates autonomous flight capability with scalable manufacturing techniques aimed at producing airframes more quickly than traditional aerospace programs. Readers who wish to follow its weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup. If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let Defence Blog know by using the online form. Executive Editor
Saab reveals pioneering 3d-printed fuselage for autonomous aircraft. Saab is rewriting the playbook for autonomous aircraft design with Divergent Technologies, unveiling a fuselage built without traditional assembly rigs. The fuselage stretches 15 feet (4.6 meters) and is made from 26 3D-printed parts, all pieced together by robots. This reportedly makes it the first aircraft body built using such a method, and it also ranks among the largest 3D-printed aerostructures ever attempted.
The Ministry of SMEs and Startups in South Korea, led by Minister Han Sung-sook, held a meeting to discuss fostering defense startups, focusing on AI, drones, and robotics. The meeting aimed to enhance domestic defense competitiveness and included representatives from six startups. The discussion highlighted the need for policy support to expand opportunities and strengthen growth in the defense sector. The minister emphasized nurturing innovative startups in advanced fields to bridge civilian and military applications.
Divergent has closed a Series E financing round, raising $290 million at a $2.3 billion valuation. Led by Rochefort Asset Management, the round includes $250 million in equity and $40 million in debt. The funds will scale Divergent's digital manufacturing platform, DAPS, to meet growing US defense production demand and develop new capabilities. CEO Lukas Czinger highlighted the expansion of their team and strengthening of America's industrial base.