3rd Line Storage Engineer - NAS/SAN
Must have an Active DV Clearance
An excellent opportunity has arisen for a 3rd Line Storage Engineer to support a secure, high profile government environment. You will work with a specialist 3rd line team and engineering functions to maintain, troubleshoot, and enhance storage and infrastructure services across a complex estate. This role is based in London and includes exposure to both legacy and modern technologies.
About the Role - 3rd Line Storage Engineer
As a 3rd Line Storage Engineer, you will support users and engineering teams through incident management tooling while maintaining critical storage platforms and associated infrastructure.
You will work with technologies including NetApp and other enterprise storage systems, supporting configuration, performance, resilience, and integration across the wider environment.
The role includes supporting Microsoft and virtualisation platforms that interface with storage services, ensuring stable and secure operation across multi site domains.
You will receive training on legacy components and contribute to upgrades, migrations, and optimisation activities.
What We're Looking For - 3rd Line Storage Engineer
Strong experience with enterprise storage platforms such as NetApp/Dell and a good understanding of storage protocols, clustering, HA, SOFS, DFS, and related storage services.
- Must have NAS/SAN experience
- Redhat knowledge would be a distinct advantage
Understanding of DNS, DHCP, PKI, firewall controls, and SMTP proxy services.
Experience with VMware, vCenter, ESXi, vMotion, HyperV, and virtualised infrastructures interacting with storage systems.
Exposure to Citrix, App-V, cloud based services, PowerShell, MBAM, BitLocker, and VPN technologies.
Desirable knowledge of cloud platforms, automation tooling, container technologies, and monitoring systems.
Deliver secure and resilient storage services within a highly sensitive environment as a 3rd Line Storage Engineer.
To apply, please send your CV by pressing the apply button.

