For engineers
Your engineering record, in a format that fits.
A structured profile for chartered engineers, expert witnesses, and forensic consultants. Case studies with named standards. Registrations with number and expiry. CV exports you don’t have to rebuild for every proposal. A public URL that carries more weight than a LinkedIn page.
Free for engineers. Free for clients. Firms pay only to list their Endorsed engineers.
Who this is for
Engineers whose credibility lives in the details.
If your work is the kind where the case study needs to name the standard, the involvement level, and the regulator, a LinkedIn summary isn’t the right container. Edelvor is.
RPEQ, CPEng, NER
Chartered practice where registration is load-bearing. Number, issuing body, expiry date. Per-line visibility.
Expert witness and forensic
Litigation-facing engineering where traceability of method, qualifications, and prior engagements matters.
Standards-heavy practice
AS 1210, ASME BPVC, BS 7910, API 579, AS/NZS 3000. First-class fields on your profile and in your CV export.
Case studies that read like engineering
Challenge, solution, outcome. Named.
Every case study on an Edelvor profile is written as challenge, solution, outcome. You attach a client name (or keep it confidential), a sector, a year, a role, and an involvement level: hands-on, oversight, or advisory. Individual items can be hidden without deleting them, useful when an NDA narrows what you can publish.
Standards go in as first-class values. A fitness-for-service case study that cites BS 7910 surfaces when a client searches “BS 7910 assessment”. A profile claiming AS 1210 pressure-equipment experience says so in its own field, not in prose.
Case study
Fatigue-fitness-for-service assessment of a jackup rig leg
Offshore drilling contractor (confidential), 2023
Challenge
Operator faced commercial pressure to return the rig to contract, with crack indications close to a welded K-node.
Solution
Level-3 BS 7910 assessment with FEA-derived stress-intensity factors, plus a defined inspection and monitoring regime for continued operation.
Outcome
Rig returned to service under a one-year monitoring plan; follow-up inspection confirmed no propagation.
Example block. A real profile looks the same, with your work.
CV export
Stop rebuilding your CV for every proposal.
Update once on your profile. Export a polished PDF for a tender. Export plain HTML for your own site. Export Markdown to drop into a proposal template. The export respects the visibility flags on each item, so an NDA-bound project stays off the document even if it’s on your internal profile.
No more evening-before-the-tender Word wrangling. No more three versions of your CV out of sync.
A public URL that carries weight
edelvor.com/p/your-name beats LinkedIn for technical work.
On a LinkedIn page, a CPEng registration is a line of text. On Edelvor, it’s a structured field with number, issuing body, and expiry, rendered the same way across every profile on the platform. A client doing due diligence can verify what they’re reading. A procurement team running a panel shortlist gets comparable data.
Your profile is portable. If you change firms, go independent, or take a break, the record stays with you. Your URL stays with you. Your case studies and credentials stay with you.
Get started
Create a profile we put in front of clients.
Named on every engagement. Put forward by specialism. Free for engineers.
Create your profileHiring an engineer? Browse Australian specialists by what your project needs, from CFD and FEA to structural certification, pressure vessels and forensic investigation.
Browse engineering specialties →Hiring guides
Hiring one? Start here.
When do you need an RPEQ?
A plain-English guide to when Queensland law requires a Registered Professional Engineer (RPEQ), what is changing in 2026 and 2027, and how to check that someone is registered.
Read the guide →What is API 579 (fitness-for-service), and when do you need it?
A plain-English guide to API 579 fitness-for-service: what it is, when it applies to pressure equipment, the assessment levels, and how to find a specialist.
Read the guide →FEA versus hand calculations, which does your project need?
When a hand calculation is enough and when finite element analysis is worth the cost, in plain terms for project owners.
Read the guide →What does a CFD study cost?
What drives the cost of a computational fluid dynamics study, and how to scope one sensibly, for project owners.
Read the guide →How long does structural certification take?
What structural certification involves and what drives the timeline, for project owners.
Read the guide →Can a Chartered Engineer certify drawings?
The difference between being Chartered (CPEng) and being able to certify or sign off work, which depends on where you are.
Read the guide →