Although it is not correct English as written, it would be understood. In English, the word "if" is a powerful word that sends a unmistakable message. It's the important word. You won't accidentally reverse its meaning by choosing the wrong verb form.
It's best if the rest of the grammar is correct and matches the "if," but what you wrote is clear.
As others have said, one correct form is "If we sign a contract with you, we'll need to find out..." I can't explain it, but we need the idea of the future in the second part, "we will need to" or "we'l need to," but we don't use it in the first part.