{"id":53734,"date":"2026-05-13T09:08:03","date_gmt":"2026-05-13T09:08:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/?page_id=53734"},"modified":"2026-05-13T09:08:05","modified_gmt":"2026-05-13T09:08:05","slug":"gears","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/ar\/mim-parts\/gears\/","title":{"rendered":"\u0623\u062c\u0632\u0627\u0621 \u062a\u0631\u0648\u0633 MIM"},"content":{"rendered":"\t\t<div data-elementor-type=\"wp-page\" data-elementor-id=\"53734\" class=\"elementor elementor-53734\" data-elementor-post-type=\"page\">\n\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-element elementor-element-7b7861a e-con-full e-flex cmsmasters-bg-hide-none cmsmasters-bg-hide-none cmsmasters-block-default e-con e-parent\" data-id=\"7b7861a\" data-element_type=\"container\" data-e-type=\"container\" data-settings=\"{&quot;background_background&quot;:&quot;classic&quot;}\">\n\t\t<div class=\"elementor-element elementor-element-e25657b e-flex e-con-boxed cmsmasters-block-default e-con e-child\" data-id=\"e25657b\" data-element_type=\"container\" data-e-type=\"container\">\n\t\t\t\t\t<div class=\"e-con-inner\">\n\t\t\t\t<div class=\"elementor-element elementor-element-9aea07d cmsmasters-block-default cmsmasters-sticky-default elementor-widget elementor-widget-heading\" data-id=\"9aea07d\" data-element_type=\"widget\" data-e-type=\"widget\" data-widget_type=\"heading.default\">\n\t\t\t\t\t<h1 class=\"elementor-heading-title elementor-size-default\">MIM Gears for Small Precision Metal Parts<\/h1>\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<div class=\"elementor-element elementor-element-dc76033 e-con-full e-flex cmsmasters-block-default e-con e-parent\" data-id=\"dc76033\" data-element_type=\"container\" data-e-type=\"container\">\n\t\t<div class=\"elementor-element elementor-element-66b7aa6 e-flex e-con-boxed cmsmasters-block-default e-con e-child\" data-id=\"66b7aa6\" data-element_type=\"container\" data-e-type=\"container\">\n\t\t\t\t\t<div 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class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-hero-grid\">\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-hero-body\">\r\n          <p class=\"xtmim-eyebrow\">MIM Parts \u00b7 Gear Manufacturing Review<\/p>\r\n          <div class=\"xtmim-page-title\">MIM Gears for Small Precision Metal Transmission Parts<\/div>\r\n          <p class=\"xtmim-lead\">\r\n            Metal injection molded gears are worth reviewing when the gear is small, complex, production-volume, and difficult to manufacture economically by machining or conventional powder metallurgy. They are not the right route for every gear. Large gears, very low-volume prototypes, simple PM-suitable spur gears, and gears that require grinding-level tooth accuracy may be better made by CNC machining, hobbing, grinding, or powder compaction. For design engineers, the real question is whether the tooth geometry, bore alignment, material, load, shrinkage behavior, inspection method, and annual volume make MIM technically reasonable before tooling. Continue reading if your gear includes micro teeth, internal features, integrated hubs, gear shafts, compact transmission geometry, or machining access problems that need an early manufacturability review.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <p>\r\n            From a design review perspective, the issue is not only \u201cCan <a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/metal-injection-molding\/\">metal injection molding<\/a> form the gear?\u201d but \u201cWill the molded, debound, sintered, and inspected gear meet the functional requirement after shrinkage, distortion, material selection, and any local secondary machining are considered?\u201d\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <nav class=\"xtmim-toc\" aria-label=\"MIM gear page navigation\">\r\n            <a href=\"#suitability\">Suitability<\/a>\r\n            <a href=\"#process-boundary\">MIM vs PM vs Machining<\/a>\r\n            <a href=\"#gear-types\">Gear Types<\/a>\r\n            <a href=\"#not-best-route\">When Not to Use MIM<\/a>\r\n            <a href=\"#dfm-risks\">DFM Risks<\/a>\r\n            <a href=\"#rfq\">RFQ Checklist<\/a>\r\n            <a href=\"#faq\">FAQ<\/a>\r\n          <\/nav>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n\r\n        <figure class=\"xtmim-figure xtmim-hero-img\">\r\n          <img fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/01-small-precision-mim-gear-parts.webp\" alt=\"Small precision MIM gear parts for manufacturability review, including micro gears and integrated gear shafts\" title=\"01 Small Precision MIM Gear Parts for Manufacturing Review\" width=\"1920\" height=\"500\" loading=\"eager\" fetchpriority=\"high\">\r\n          <figcaption>Small precision MIM gear parts for manufacturing review.<\/figcaption>\r\n          <div class=\"xtmim-figure-note\">\r\n            <p><strong>Core conclusion:<\/strong> MIM gear review should focus on compact, complex, production-volume parts rather than treating every metal gear as a MIM candidate.<\/p>\r\n          <\/div>\r\n        <\/figure>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-card-grid\">\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card xtmim-card-good\">\r\n          <h3>Good Fit for MIM<\/h3>\r\n          <ul>\r\n            <li>Micro gears and miniature gear parts<\/li>\r\n            <li>Integrated gear shafts and complex hubs<\/li>\r\n            <li>Small internal gears or compact transmission features<\/li>\r\n            <li>Medium to high production-volume metal gears<\/li>\r\n          <\/ul>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card xtmim-card-review\">\r\n          <h3>Review Carefully<\/h3>\r\n          <ul>\r\n            <li>Helical gears and worm gear parts<\/li>\r\n            <li>High-load or wear-sensitive gears<\/li>\r\n            <li>Tight bore-to-tooth concentricity<\/li>\r\n            <li>Gears requiring heat treatment or local machining<\/li>\r\n          <\/ul>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card xtmim-card-bad\">\r\n          <h3>Usually Not First Choice<\/h3>\r\n          <ul>\r\n            <li>Large gears or heavy-duty drivetrain gears<\/li>\r\n            <li>Very low-volume prototypes<\/li>\r\n            <li>Simple regular PM-suitable gears<\/li>\r\n            <li>Gears requiring full grinding-level tooth finishing<\/li>\r\n          <\/ul>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"suitability\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-intro\">\r\n        <h2>When Are Gears Suitable for Metal Injection Molding?<\/h2>\r\n        <p>\r\n          A gear becomes a stronger MIM candidate when the part combines small size, complex geometry, production volume, and material requirements that make conventional machining inefficient. In practice, MIM is most often reviewed for compact metal gears with integrated hubs, small shafts, internal features, fine teeth, non-standard bores, stepped geometry, or complex side features.\r\n        <\/p>\r\n        <p>\r\n          A common mistake is to assume that any metal gear can be converted to MIM. That is not accurate. MIM starts with fine metal powder mixed with binder to create feedstock. The feedstock is injection molded, the green part is handled and debound, and the brown part is sintered to high density. During sintering, the part shrinks, so gear tooth form, bore position, concentricity, support method, and distortion risk must be reviewed before tooling. For broader structural rules, use this page together with the <a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-design-guide\/\">MIM design guide<\/a>.\r\n        <\/p>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-table-wrap\">\r\n        <table>\r\n          <thead>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <th>Gear Condition<\/th>\r\n              <th>Why It Supports MIM Review<\/th>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/thead>\r\n          <tbody>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Small or miniature size<\/td>\r\n              <td>Small gear parts can be difficult and costly to machine repeatedly, especially when they include fine teeth, compact hubs, or small functional bores.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Complex 3D features<\/td>\r\n              <td>MIM can integrate teeth, hubs, shafts, holes, retention shapes, and functional details into one metal component when tooling and shrinkage behavior are feasible.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Medium to high production volume<\/td>\r\n              <td>MIM tooling cost can be justified when the design is stable and the projected production volume supports tool amortization.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Difficult machining access<\/td>\r\n              <td>Fine teeth, internal forms, compact bores, and side features may increase machining time, fixturing complexity, inspection difficulty, and scrap risk.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Need for dense metal properties<\/td>\r\n              <td>MIM can produce dense metal parts when material selection, debinding, sintering, and inspection are controlled for the application requirement.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Assembly reduction opportunity<\/td>\r\n              <td>MIM may combine a gear, shaft, hub, and retention feature into one component, reducing pins, keys, press-fit operations, or small assembly steps.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/tbody>\r\n        <\/table>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-note\">\r\n        <p><strong>Engineering rule:<\/strong> MIM should be selected because it solves a geometry, volume, integration, or machining-access problem\u2014not simply because the part is a metal gear.<\/p>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"process-boundary\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>MIM Gears vs PM Gears vs Machined Gears: Which Process Fits?<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        The real manufacturing decision is often between MIM, <a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/powder-metallurgy\/\">powder metallurgy<\/a>, and machining. PM should not be treated as a weaker version of MIM. PM can be better when the gear is relatively regular, cost-sensitive, high-volume, and suitable for axial powder compaction. Machining can be better when the gear is large, low-volume, still changing in design, or requires tooth finishing accuracy that depends on hobbing, shaping, or grinding. For a broader process-level comparison between powder compaction and MIM feedstock molding, review the <a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-comparison\/mim-vs-pm\/\">MIM vs PM process comparison<\/a>.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <figure class=\"xtmim-figure\">\r\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/02-mim-pm-cnc-gear-decision-map.webp\" alt=\"Decision map comparing MIM gears, PM gears, and machined gears by geometry complexity, production volume, tooling economics, and accuracy requirements\" title=\"02 MIM PM CNC Gear Manufacturing Decision Map\" width=\"1600\" height=\"900\" loading=\"lazy\">\r\n        <figcaption>MIM vs PM vs CNC gear manufacturing decision map.<\/figcaption>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-figure-note\">\r\n          <p><strong>Core conclusion:<\/strong> The correct gear process depends on geometry, production volume, tooth accuracy, tooling economics, and the level of functional risk\u2014not only on the material being metal.<\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/figure>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-table-wrap\">\r\n        <table>\r\n          <thead>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <th>Decision Factor<\/th>\r\n              <th>MIM Gears<\/th>\r\n              <th>PM Gears<\/th>\r\n              <th>CNC \/ Machined Gears<\/th>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/thead>\r\n          <tbody>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Best fit<\/td>\r\n              <td>Small, complex, production-volume gears<\/td>\r\n              <td>Regular, high-volume, cost-sensitive gears<\/td>\r\n              <td>Prototypes, low-volume gears, large gears, high-accuracy gears<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Geometry<\/td>\r\n              <td>Complex 3D features, internal forms, small teeth, integrated shafts, compact hubs<\/td>\r\n              <td>Axial compaction-friendly shapes with relatively regular geometry<\/td>\r\n              <td>Flexible geometry, but cost rises with small features, complex fixturing, and tight inspection needs<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Volume<\/td>\r\n              <td>Medium to high volume after design stabilization<\/td>\r\n              <td>High volume with strong cost pressure<\/td>\r\n              <td>Low to medium volume, prototypes, or changing designs<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Tooling<\/td>\r\n              <td>Higher tooling investment, justified by complexity, repeatability, and volume<\/td>\r\n              <td>Often economical for compactable regular shapes<\/td>\r\n              <td>No MIM tooling, but higher unit machining cost for complex miniature features<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Accuracy strategy<\/td>\r\n              <td>Tooling compensation, sintering control, inspection, and local machining if needed<\/td>\r\n              <td>Compaction, sintering, sizing, coining, repressing, and inspection<\/td>\r\n              <td>Turning, milling, hobbing, shaping, grinding, and post-machining inspection<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Typical examples<\/td>\r\n              <td>Micro gears, integrated gear shafts, compact helical gear parts, small internal gear features<\/td>\r\n              <td>Regular spur gears, oil-impregnated gears, simple structural gears<\/td>\r\n              <td>High-accuracy gears, large gears, prototypes, frequently revised parts<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Not ideal for<\/td>\r\n              <td>Large gears, low volume, ultra-high tooth finishing requirements<\/td>\r\n              <td>Complex 3D features, undercuts, and non-compactable forms<\/td>\r\n              <td>High-volume tiny complex gears where machining time and inspection cost are excessive<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/tbody>\r\n        <\/table>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"gear-types\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>MIM Gear Types Commonly Reviewed for Production<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        This section helps users route a gear project into the right subcategory. The goal is not to turn this gear overview page into a deep page for every gear type. More specific projects can be routed by gear type, such as micro gears, helical gears, worm gear parts, internal gears, or integrated gear shafts, when the drawing and application background show that a focused engineering review is needed.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <figure class=\"xtmim-figure\">\r\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/03-mim-gear-type-suitability-map-1.webp\" alt=\"MIM gear type suitability map showing micro gears, integrated gear shafts, helical gears, internal gears, worm gear parts, and complex spur gears\" title=\"03 MIM Gear Type Suitability Map\" width=\"1600\" height=\"900\" loading=\"lazy\">\r\n        <figcaption>MIM gear type suitability map.<\/figcaption>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-figure-note\">\r\n          <p><strong>Core conclusion:<\/strong> The strongest MIM gear candidates usually combine small size, complex geometry, and functional integration.<\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/figure>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-grid xtmim-grid-2\">\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Micro Gears<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Micro gears are strong MIM candidates when the part is small, metal, complex, and required in production volume. Fine teeth, small bores, miniature shafts, compact transmission layouts, and limited machining access can make conventional machining costly or unstable.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Before tooling, the project should review tooth size, bore-to-tooth concentricity, inspection method, material, and whether any local finishing is needed after sintering.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Integrated Gear Shafts<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Integrated gear shafts are valuable MIM candidates when the project can reduce separate machining, assembly, pins, keys, or press-fit operations. The main engineering issue is the relationship between gear teeth, shaft straightness, concentricity, and local finishing strategy.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <p><a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/shafts-and-pins\/\">Compare related MIM shafts and pins<\/a><\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Helical Gears<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Helical gears can be reviewed for MIM when the tooth geometry, size, and production volume justify tooling complexity. Compared with simple spur gears, helical gears introduce concerns such as helix angle, thrust direction, tooling movement, sintering distortion, and inspection.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Internal Gears<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Small internal gears may be suitable for MIM when internal teeth, compact housing features, or difficult machining access make conventional cutting less efficient. The key risks are internal tooth filling, distortion, inspection access, and tooth-to-bore alignment.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Worm Gear Parts<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Worm gear parts and worm-wheel-related geometries can be attractive MIM candidates when the part includes small size, complex helical-like geometry, sliding contact, integrated shafts, or difficult machining access. Wear, lubrication, hardness, and mating part condition should be reviewed early.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <p><a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/wear-resistant-parts\/\">Review wear-resistant MIM parts<\/a><\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Small Spur Gears with Complex Hubs<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Small spur gears can be MIM candidates, but only under the right conditions. A simple, regular spur gear may be more economical by PM or machining. MIM becomes more relevant when the spur gear includes a complex hub, special bore, integrated shaft, side feature, or assembly-reduction opportunity.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"related-pages\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>Related MIM Gear Pages and Routing Paths<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        The gear page works as a part-type gateway inside the broader <a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/\">MIM parts<\/a> structure. It should repeat the strongest MIM gear candidate types, explain manufacturing boundaries, and route users to more specific part-type, performance, material, or industry pages without turning this page into a long gear theory article.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-table-wrap\">\r\n        <table>\r\n          <thead>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <th>Related Path<\/th>\r\n              <th>When to Use It<\/th>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/thead>\r\n          <tbody>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Micro Gear Review<\/td>\r\n              <td>Use this route for miniature gears, small modules, compact transmission parts, small bores, and difficult micro-machining cases.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Helical Gear Review<\/td>\r\n              <td>Use this route for gears with helix angle, thrust direction, complex tooth geometry, tooling movement concerns, or helix-related inspection needs.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Worm Gear Parts<\/td>\r\n              <td>Use this route for worm gear parts, worm-wheel-related geometries, sliding contact, lubrication, and mating surface concerns.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Integrated Gear Shafts<\/td>\r\n              <td>Use this route for gear and shaft integration, assembly reduction, bore-to-tooth concentricity, shaft straightness, and local machining review.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td><a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/wear-resistant-parts\/\">Wear-Resistant MIM Parts<\/a><\/td>\r\n              <td>Use this route for gear projects where sliding wear, hardness, heat treatment, lubrication, and mating surfaces are critical.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td><a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/high-strength-parts\/\">High-Strength MIM Parts<\/a><\/td>\r\n              <td>Use this route for gears where torque, tooth root strength, mechanical load, or safety margin is a major concern.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/tbody>\r\n        <\/table>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"not-best-route\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>When MIM Is Not the Best Manufacturing Route for Gears<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        A strong MIM review should also explain when MIM is not the best choice. This is especially important for gears because tooth accuracy, load, noise, heat treatment, and finishing requirements may override the apparent benefit of near-net-shape molding. If the functional requirement depends on final tooth grinding, MIM may only replace the blank-forming step, not the full gear finishing route.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-table-wrap\">\r\n        <table>\r\n          <thead>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <th>Gear Condition<\/th>\r\n              <th>Why MIM May Not Be Ideal<\/th>\r\n              <th>Better Route to Review<\/th>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/thead>\r\n          <tbody>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Large gear size<\/td>\r\n              <td>Sintering shrinkage and distortion risk increase with part size, uneven mass, and unsupported geometry.<\/td>\r\n              <td>CNC, hobbing, casting plus machining, or forged\/machined route depending on load<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Very low volume<\/td>\r\n              <td>Tooling cost is difficult to justify when the design is not stable or the production demand is small.<\/td>\r\n              <td>CNC machining<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Simple regular gear<\/td>\r\n              <td>PM may be more economical if the shape is suitable for axial powder compaction and does not require complex 3D features.<\/td>\r\n              <td>PM<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Ultra-high tooth accuracy<\/td>\r\n              <td>Final accuracy may depend on hobbing, grinding, or dedicated tooth finishing operations.<\/td>\r\n              <td>Hobbing, grinding, precision machining<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Frequently revised design<\/td>\r\n              <td>MIM tooling changes can be expensive after the mold is built.<\/td>\r\n              <td>CNC prototype or staged design validation<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Heavy-duty safety-critical gear<\/td>\r\n              <td>Fatigue, heat treatment, wear, validation, and application-specific testing may dominate the process decision.<\/td>\r\n              <td>Project-specific process review<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Fully ground tooth surfaces<\/td>\r\n              <td>The near-net-shape benefit of MIM may be reduced if the critical functional surfaces still require full machining.<\/td>\r\n              <td>Machining or grinding<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/tbody>\r\n        <\/table>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"dfm-risks\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>Gear Accuracy, Load, and DFM Risks Before Tooling<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        Gear parts require a stricter review than many simple structural MIM components. A gear is not only judged by external shape. It must mesh, rotate, transfer load, manage wear, and fit mating parts. A gear may look moldable in CAD but still create problems if tooth profile, pitch behavior, runout, bore alignment, heat treatment response, and inspection requirements are not defined before tooling.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <figure class=\"xtmim-figure\">\r\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/04-mim-gear-dfm-risk-map.webp\" alt=\"MIM gear DFM risk map showing tooth shrinkage, bore concentricity, root strength, parting line, sintering distortion, and secondary machining allowance areas\" title=\"04 MIM Gear DFM Risk Map Before Tooling\" width=\"1600\" height=\"900\" loading=\"lazy\">\r\n        <figcaption>MIM gear DFM risk map before tooling.<\/figcaption>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-figure-note\">\r\n          <p><strong>Core conclusion:<\/strong> A gear may be moldable but still fail functionally if tooth accuracy, bore alignment, load, and sintering behavior are not reviewed before tooling.<\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/figure>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-grid xtmim-grid-3\">\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Tooth Accuracy Is Not Only a Molding Issue<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Tooth accuracy depends on mold design, feedstock behavior, filling stability, green part handling, debinding, sintering shrinkage, part support, and final inspection. If the gear has a specified tooth tolerance, backlash target, or runout limit, those requirements should be included in the RFQ package.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Load, Wear, Noise, and Mating Conditions<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            A small MIM gear may pass dimensional inspection but still fail if the mating gear, lubrication, load direction, tooth contact, or hardness requirement is not considered. Noise-sensitive gears need additional caution because small tooth and runout changes can affect motion feel.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Tooth Profile Shrinkage and Compensation<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            MIM gears experience shrinkage during sintering. Tooling must compensate for this shrinkage, but compensation becomes more difficult when teeth are small, walls are thin, hubs are asymmetric, or mass distribution is uneven.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Bore-to-Tooth Concentricity<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Bore-to-tooth concentricity is often more important than a single bore diameter value. When concentricity is critical, the drawing should define the datum structure, bore tolerance, runout requirement, and inspection method.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Tooth Root Strength<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Tooth root strength is influenced by material, heat treatment, tooth geometry, root radius, density, surface condition, and loading direction. For load-bearing gears, review the tooth root, hub, bore, and integrated features together.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Secondary Machining Strategy<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            The goal of MIM is not always zero machining. A better goal is to reduce unnecessary machining while using local secondary operations for bores, datum faces, bearing interfaces, shaft seats, or critical assembly surfaces.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-scenario\">\r\n        <h3>Composite Field Scenario for Engineering Training: Bore Runout After Sintering<\/h3>\r\n        <p><strong>What problem occurred:<\/strong> A compact MIM gear assembled onto a shaft, but rotation showed uneven motion and inconsistent backlash during functional checking.<\/p>\r\n        <p><strong>Why it happened:<\/strong> The original drawing emphasized tooth shape and bore diameter but did not clearly define bore-to-tooth concentricity, datum structure, or runout requirement.<\/p>\r\n        <p><strong>What the real system cause was:<\/strong> The gear was reviewed as a molded shape rather than as a rotating functional part. Sintering shrinkage, local mass distribution, datum selection, and post-sintering inspection were not linked early enough.<\/p>\r\n        <p><strong>How it was corrected:<\/strong> The drawing was updated to define functional datums, runout requirements, and inspection method. A local post-sintering bore finishing strategy was reviewed for the most critical interface.<\/p>\r\n        <p><strong>How to prevent recurrence:<\/strong> Before tooling, define the functional axis, mating shaft condition, tooth-to-bore relationship, acceptable runout, and whether the bore should be molded net-shape or finished after sintering.<\/p>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"materials\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>Material and Heat Treatment Review for MIM Gears<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        MIM gear material selection should be driven by load, wear, corrosion exposure, mating part condition, heat treatment response, and inspection requirements. It should not be selected only by generic hardness or strength expectations. For broader material family selection, review the <a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-materials\/\">MIM materials<\/a> hub.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-table-wrap\">\r\n        <table>\r\n          <thead>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <th>Requirement<\/th>\r\n              <th>Material Review Question<\/th>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/thead>\r\n          <tbody>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Wear resistance<\/td>\r\n              <td>Does the gear need hardness, surface control, lubrication, or mating material review?<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Corrosion resistance<\/td>\r\n              <td>Is the gear exposed to humidity, cleaning agents, medical environments, or outdoor conditions?<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Strength<\/td>\r\n              <td>Is torque load, tooth root stress, or impact resistance the primary concern?<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Heat treatment<\/td>\r\n              <td>Will heat treatment improve performance, or will it increase distortion and dimensional control risk?<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Magnetic behavior<\/td>\r\n              <td>Does the application require magnetic or non-magnetic behavior?<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Cost<\/td>\r\n              <td>Is the material requirement justified by gear function, annual volume, inspection requirements, and service environment?<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/tbody>\r\n        <\/table>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <p>\r\n        Common MIM gear material families may include stainless steels, precipitation-hardening stainless steels, low alloy steels, and wear-focused stainless grades, depending on the project. Final selection should be confirmed through material datasheets, heat treatment strategy, dimensional review, and application testing.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"inspection\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>Inspection Points for MIM Gear Projects<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        Inspection requirements should be selected based on gear function. A low-load positioning gear does not need the same inspection plan as a high-accuracy transmission gear. The drawing, mating parts, application load, and buyer requirements should define what must be controlled.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-table-wrap\">\r\n        <table>\r\n          <thead>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <th>Inspection Point<\/th>\r\n              <th>Why It Matters<\/th>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/thead>\r\n          <tbody>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Tooth profile<\/td>\r\n              <td>Affects meshing, motion transfer, contact behavior, and functional noise.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Tooth thickness<\/td>\r\n              <td>Affects backlash and functional fit.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Pitch error<\/td>\r\n              <td>Affects transmission smoothness and accumulated motion error.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Runout<\/td>\r\n              <td>Affects rotation stability and gear engagement.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Bore diameter<\/td>\r\n              <td>Controls shaft fit and assembly condition.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Bore-to-tooth concentricity<\/td>\r\n              <td>Controls how the gear rotates relative to the functional teeth.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Hardness<\/td>\r\n              <td>Influences wear behavior and load capacity.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Density \/ sintering condition<\/td>\r\n              <td>Affects mechanical reliability, dimensional consistency, and material performance.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Surface condition<\/td>\r\n              <td>Influences friction, wear, lubrication behavior, and mating surface interaction.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Functional fit<\/td>\r\n              <td>Confirms performance with the mating gear, shaft, or assembled mechanism when required.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/tbody>\r\n        <\/table>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-note\">\r\n        <p><strong>Inspection note:<\/strong> For high-accuracy gears, inspection requirements should be defined by the drawing, application, mating gear, and applicable gear tolerance reference instead of assuming a generic MIM tolerance. Gear quality grade requirements must be confirmed against the drawing, inspection method, supplier capability, and any required post-sintering finishing process.<\/p>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"applications\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>Where MIM Gears Are Commonly Reviewed<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        MIM gear projects often appear inside broader industry applications, but this page should not become an industry application page. The following examples are routing points for users who need industry-specific part context.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-grid xtmim-grid-2\">\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Automotive Small Gear Parts<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Automotive MIM gear review is most relevant for small mechanisms, lock components, actuator parts, sensor-related mechanisms, and compact metal transmission elements. Large transmission gears or high-load drivetrain gears normally require a different route.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <p><a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/automotive-parts\/\">Review automotive MIM parts<\/a><\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Robotics Gear and Actuator Parts<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Robotics applications may use compact metal gears where space, integration, strength, and repeatable motion matter. Load, backlash, wear, and lubrication should be evaluated early.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <p><a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/robotics-parts\/\">Review robotics MIM parts<\/a><\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Medical Device Micro Transmission Parts<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Medical device gear applications may involve small motion-control parts, instrument mechanisms, or compact assemblies. MIM review should consider material selection, cleaning exposure, inspection requirements, and functional fit.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <p><a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/medical-parts\/\">Review medical MIM parts<\/a><\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-card\">\r\n          <h3>Consumer Electronics and Precision Hinge Gears<\/h3>\r\n          <p>\r\n            Consumer electronics and precision hinge systems may use small metal gears or gear-like transmission features where compact size, smooth motion, and assembly reduction matter.\r\n          <\/p>\r\n          <p><a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/consumer-electronics-parts\/\">Review consumer electronics MIM parts<\/a><\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"rfq\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>How We Review a MIM Gear Drawing Before Quotation<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        A useful MIM gear quotation should begin with manufacturability review, not only price calculation. The review should identify whether the gear is a good MIM candidate or whether PM, machining, hobbing, or grinding is more practical. This prevents the project from paying for MIM tooling when the real constraint is tooth accuracy, volume, heat treatment distortion, or a geometry that another process can produce more reliably.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <figure class=\"xtmim-figure\">\r\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/05-mim-gear-rfq-review-checklist.webp\" alt=\"MIM gear RFQ review checklist showing drawing inputs, gear parameters, material requirements, DFM review, tooling risk, shrinkage review, and inspection points\" title=\"05 MIM Gear RFQ and Engineering Review Checklist\" width=\"1600\" height=\"900\" loading=\"lazy\">\r\n        <figcaption>MIM gear RFQ and engineering review checklist.<\/figcaption>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-figure-note\">\r\n          <p><strong>Core conclusion:<\/strong> Better RFQ input allows the supplier to review MIM suitability, PM or machining alternatives, tooling risk, shrinkage behavior, and inspection requirements before quotation.<\/p>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/figure>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-table-wrap\">\r\n        <table>\r\n          <thead>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <th>Review Item<\/th>\r\n              <th>What the Engineering Team Checks<\/th>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/thead>\r\n          <tbody>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Gear type and tooth geometry<\/td>\r\n              <td>Whether the gear is spur, helical, internal, worm-related, micro, integrated shaft, or compound.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Part size and mass distribution<\/td>\r\n              <td>Whether shrinkage, support, and sintering distortion can be controlled.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Bore, shaft, hub, and integrated features<\/td>\r\n              <td>Whether MIM integration reduces machining and assembly without creating unacceptable risk.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Material and heat treatment<\/td>\r\n              <td>Whether the material route supports load, wear, corrosion, hardness, and dimensional stability.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Critical dimensions and datums<\/td>\r\n              <td>Whether drawing tolerances match functional gear requirements.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Secondary machining<\/td>\r\n              <td>Whether local finishing is needed for bores, datum faces, gear interfaces, or bearing seats.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Annual volume and tooling economics<\/td>\r\n              <td>Whether MIM tooling is reasonable compared with PM or machining.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/tbody>\r\n        <\/table>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <h2>What to Provide for a MIM Gear RFQ<\/h2>\r\n      <p>\r\n        A complete RFQ package helps the engineering team evaluate process suitability, tooling risk, material selection, inspection needs, and secondary machining requirements. For engineering review, send your drawing through <a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/submit-drawing-for-review\/\">submit drawing for review<\/a> or start a formal RFQ through <a href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/request-a-quote\/\">request a quote<\/a>.\r\n      <\/p>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-table-wrap\">\r\n        <table>\r\n          <thead>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <th>RFQ Input<\/th>\r\n              <th>Why It Matters<\/th>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/thead>\r\n          <tbody>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>2D drawing<\/td>\r\n              <td>Defines dimensions, tolerances, datums, surface notes, and inspection requirements.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>3D CAD file<\/td>\r\n              <td>Helps evaluate geometry, wall thickness, tooling layout, gating direction, and shrinkage compensation.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Gear type<\/td>\r\n              <td>Defines whether the part is spur, helical, internal, worm-related, micro, integrated shaft, or compound.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Module or diametral pitch<\/td>\r\n              <td>Defines tooth size and gear geometry.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Tooth count and pressure angle<\/td>\r\n              <td>Supports tooth geometry and mating gear compatibility review.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Helix angle<\/td>\r\n              <td>Required for helical gear review, tooling movement, and thrust-direction evaluation.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Bore diameter and tolerance<\/td>\r\n              <td>Controls shaft fit and bore-to-tooth concentricity review.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Material and heat treatment<\/td>\r\n              <td>Drives strength, corrosion resistance, wear behavior, hardness, distortion, and inspection review.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Mating part information<\/td>\r\n              <td>Helps review backlash, contact, load, alignment, lubrication, and functional fit.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n            <tr>\r\n              <td>Annual volume<\/td>\r\n              <td>Determines whether MIM tooling is economically reasonable compared with PM or machining.<\/td>\r\n            <\/tr>\r\n          <\/tbody>\r\n        <\/table>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-scenario\">\r\n        <h3>Composite Field Scenario for Engineering Training: Simple Spur Gear Routed Away from MIM<\/h3>\r\n        <p><strong>What problem occurred:<\/strong> A buyer requested a MIM quotation for a small spur gear because the part was metal and planned for repeated production.<\/p>\r\n        <p><strong>Why it happened:<\/strong> The buyer assumed MIM was automatically better for all small metal gears.<\/p>\r\n        <p><strong>What the real system cause was:<\/strong> The gear shape was regular, the tooth geometry was not complex, and the part did not use MIM\u2019s strongest advantage: complex 3D feature integration. The design could be evaluated by PM because the geometry was suitable for axial powder compaction.<\/p>\r\n        <p><strong>How it was corrected:<\/strong> The project was reviewed as a PM candidate instead of forcing a MIM route. MIM remained a backup only if future design changes added complex hubs, integrated shafts, internal features, or machining-access problems.<\/p>\r\n        <p><strong>How to prevent recurrence:<\/strong> During RFQ review, compare MIM, PM, and machining by geometry, volume, tolerance, tooling cost, and functional risk before selecting the manufacturing route.<\/p>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"standards\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-standards\">\r\n        <h2>Standards and Technical Reference Notes<\/h2>\r\n        <p>\r\n          Gear and MIM project requirements should be confirmed against the customer drawing, material datasheet, mating part condition, and applicable project standards. The references below are included to guide technical discussion; they should not be used as a substitute for project-specific engineering review.\r\n        <\/p>\r\n        <p>\r\n          MPIF Standard 35-MIM supports material specification and engineering property reference for MIM parts. ISO 1328-1 supports gear accuracy terminology and tolerance reference for cylindrical involute gears. Neither reference by itself defines whether a specific MIM gear will meet the buyer\u2019s functional requirement; final acceptance should follow the drawing, mating condition, inspection method, secondary finishing plan, and supplier capability review.\r\n        <\/p>\r\n        <ul>\r\n          <li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.mimaweb.org\/MPIFStandard35.aspx\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">MPIF Standard 35-MIM<\/a>: relevant for MIM material specification and engineering property reference when selecting a MIM material for gear parts.<\/li>\r\n          <li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.mimaweb.org\/DesignCenter\/ComplexDesignswithMIM.aspx\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">MIMA Design Center<\/a>: relevant for understanding how complex MIM part design and tooling review affect manufacturability and cost.<\/li>\r\n          <li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.iso.org\/standard\/45309.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">ISO 1328-1<\/a>: relevant when the buyer and manufacturer need a formal reference for cylindrical involute gear flank tolerance classification and tooth-flank conformity language.<\/li>\r\n        <\/ul>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"faq\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <h2>FAQ About MIM Gears<\/h2>\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-faq\">\r\n        <details>\r\n          <summary>Are all metal gears suitable for MIM?<\/summary>\r\n          <p>No. MIM is mainly suitable for small, complex, production-volume metal gears where tooling cost can be justified and where the geometry benefits from injection molding. Large gears, low-volume prototypes, simple PM-suitable gears, or gears requiring heavy grinding may be better made by machining, PM, hobbing, or grinding.<\/p>\r\n        <\/details>\r\n\r\n        <details>\r\n          <summary>When should I choose PM instead of MIM for gears?<\/summary>\r\n          <p>PM may be a better option when the gear has a regular geometry, can be formed by axial powder compaction, and is produced in high volume with strong cost pressure. MIM becomes more relevant when the gear includes complex 3D features, internal forms, small details, or integrated shafts that are difficult for conventional PM compaction.<\/p>\r\n        <\/details>\r\n\r\n        <details>\r\n          <summary>When should I choose CNC machining instead of MIM?<\/summary>\r\n          <p>CNC machining is usually better for prototypes, low-volume gears, large gears, frequently revised designs, or gears requiring very high tooth accuracy through hobbing, shaping, grinding, or other precision finishing.<\/p>\r\n        <\/details>\r\n\r\n        <details>\r\n          <summary>Can MIM make helical gears?<\/summary>\r\n          <p>MIM can be reviewed for helical gears, especially small and complex designs, but the project must consider helix angle, tooling movement, parting line, sintering distortion, tooth inspection, mating gear condition, and production volume.<\/p>\r\n        <\/details>\r\n\r\n        <details>\r\n          <summary>Can MIM gears meet high gear accuracy grades?<\/summary>\r\n          <p>MIM gears can meet some project-specific accuracy requirements, but high gear quality grades must be confirmed by drawing requirements, supplier capability, inspection method, tooling control, and any required secondary finishing. If the functional requirement depends on final tooth grinding, MIM may only replace part of the blank-forming route, not the full gear finishing route.<\/p>\r\n        <\/details>\r\n\r\n        <details>\r\n          <summary>Do MIM gears need secondary machining?<\/summary>\r\n          <p>Some MIM gears can be used near-net-shape, but others may need local machining for bores, datum faces, shaft seats, bearing interfaces, or high-precision assembly surfaces. The goal is not always to eliminate all machining; it is to use machining only where it improves function or reduces risk.<\/p>\r\n        <\/details>\r\n\r\n        <details>\r\n          <summary>What information is needed for a MIM gear quotation?<\/summary>\r\n          <p>A useful RFQ should include 2D drawings, 3D CAD files, gear type, module or diametral pitch, tooth count, pressure angle, helix angle if applicable, bore tolerance, material, heat treatment, surface finish, mating part information, load or torque conditions, and estimated annual volume.<\/p>\r\n        <\/details>\r\n\r\n        <details>\r\n          <summary>Can MIM gears replace machined gears?<\/summary>\r\n          <p>Sometimes. MIM can replace machined gears when the part is small, complex, and produced in sufficient volume. It is less suitable when the gear is large, low-volume, frequently changed, or requires very high tooth finishing accuracy that still depends on grinding or precision machining.<\/p>\r\n        <\/details>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n\r\n  <section id=\"project-review\" class=\"xtmim-section\">\r\n    <div class=\"xtmim-wrap\">\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-cta\">\r\n        <h2>Submit Your Gear Drawing for MIM Suitability Review<\/h2>\r\n        <p>\r\n          If your gear is small, complex, integrated with shafts or hubs, difficult to machine repeatedly, or planned for medium to high production volume, send your drawing for MIM gear manufacturability review. XTMIM can review whether MIM is suitable, whether PM, machining, or a hybrid route may be more economical, where tooling and sintering risks may appear, and which critical features should be confirmed before tooling, trial production, or volume production.\r\n        <\/p>\r\n        <p>\r\n          For a useful review, provide 2D drawings, 3D CAD files, material requirements, gear parameters, critical tolerances, mating part information, heat treatment requirements, surface requirements, application background, and estimated annual volume.\r\n        <\/p>\r\n        <div class=\"xtmim-btns\">\r\n          <a class=\"xtmim-btn\" href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/submit-drawing-for-review\/\">Submit Drawing for Review<\/a>\r\n          <a class=\"xtmim-btn xtmim-btn-secondary\" href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/request-a-quote\/\">Request a Quote<\/a>\r\n          <a class=\"xtmim-btn xtmim-btn-secondary\" href=\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/contact-us\/\">Contact Us<\/a>\r\n        <\/div>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n\r\n      <div class=\"xtmim-author xtmim-mt-md\">\r\n        <h3>Reviewed by XTMIM Engineering Team<\/h3>\r\n        <p>\r\n          This page was prepared from a MIM gear manufacturability perspective. The review focus includes process suitability, material selection, DFM, tooling risk, green part handling, debinding and sintering shrinkage, gear tooth accuracy, bore-to-tooth concentricity, secondary machining strategy, tolerance requirements, inspection planning, and production feasibility.\r\n        <\/p>\r\n      <\/div>\r\n    <\/div>\r\n  <\/section>\r\n<\/article>\r\n\r\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\">\r\n{\r\n  \"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\r\n  \"@type\":\"FAQPage\",\r\n  \"mainEntity\":[\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"Question\",\r\n      \"name\":\"Are all metal gears suitable for MIM?\",\r\n      \"acceptedAnswer\":{\r\n        \"@type\":\"Answer\",\r\n        \"text\":\"No. MIM is mainly suitable for small, complex, production-volume metal gears where tooling cost can be justified and where the geometry benefits from injection molding. 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MIM becomes more relevant when the gear includes complex 3D features, internal forms, small details, or integrated shafts that are difficult for conventional PM compaction.\"\r\n      }\r\n    },\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"Question\",\r\n      \"name\":\"When should I choose CNC machining instead of MIM?\",\r\n      \"acceptedAnswer\":{\r\n        \"@type\":\"Answer\",\r\n        \"text\":\"CNC machining is usually better for prototypes, low-volume gears, large gears, frequently revised designs, or gears requiring very high tooth accuracy through hobbing, shaping, grinding, or other precision finishing.\"\r\n      }\r\n    },\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"Question\",\r\n      \"name\":\"Can MIM make helical gears?\",\r\n      \"acceptedAnswer\":{\r\n        \"@type\":\"Answer\",\r\n        \"text\":\"MIM can be reviewed for helical gears, especially small and complex designs, but the project must consider helix angle, tooling movement, parting line, sintering distortion, tooth inspection, mating gear condition, and production volume.\"\r\n      }\r\n    },\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"Question\",\r\n      \"name\":\"Can MIM gears meet high gear accuracy grades?\",\r\n      \"acceptedAnswer\":{\r\n        \"@type\":\"Answer\",\r\n        \"text\":\"MIM gears can meet some project-specific accuracy requirements, but high gear quality grades must be confirmed by drawing requirements, supplier capability, inspection method, tooling control, and any required secondary finishing. If the functional requirement depends on final tooth grinding, MIM may only replace part of the blank-forming route, not the full gear finishing route.\"\r\n      }\r\n    },\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"Question\",\r\n      \"name\":\"Do MIM gears need secondary machining?\",\r\n      \"acceptedAnswer\":{\r\n        \"@type\":\"Answer\",\r\n        \"text\":\"Some MIM gears can be used near-net-shape, but others may need local machining for bores, datum faces, shaft seats, bearing interfaces, or high-precision assembly surfaces. The goal is not always to eliminate all machining; it is to use machining only where it improves function or reduces risk.\"\r\n      }\r\n    },\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"Question\",\r\n      \"name\":\"What information is needed for a MIM gear quotation?\",\r\n      \"acceptedAnswer\":{\r\n        \"@type\":\"Answer\",\r\n        \"text\":\"A useful RFQ should include 2D drawings, 3D CAD files, gear type, module or diametral pitch, tooth count, pressure angle, helix angle if applicable, bore tolerance, material, heat treatment, surface finish, mating part information, load or torque conditions, and estimated annual volume.\"\r\n      }\r\n    },\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"Question\",\r\n      \"name\":\"Can MIM gears replace machined gears?\",\r\n      \"acceptedAnswer\":{\r\n        \"@type\":\"Answer\",\r\n        \"text\":\"Sometimes. MIM can replace machined gears when the part is small, complex, and produced in sufficient volume. It is less suitable when the gear is large, low-volume, frequently changed, or requires very high tooth finishing accuracy that still depends on grinding or precision machining.\"\r\n      }\r\n    }\r\n  ]\r\n}\r\n<\/script>\r\n\r\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\">\r\n{\r\n  \"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\r\n  \"@type\":\"BreadcrumbList\",\r\n  \"itemListElement\":[\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"ListItem\",\r\n      \"position\":1,\r\n      \"name\":\"Home\",\r\n      \"item\":\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/\"\r\n    },\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"ListItem\",\r\n      \"position\":2,\r\n      \"name\":\"MIM Parts\",\r\n      \"item\":\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/\"\r\n    },\r\n    {\r\n      \"@type\":\"ListItem\",\r\n      \"position\":3,\r\n      \"name\":\"MIM Gears\",\r\n      \"item\":\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/gears\/\"\r\n    }\r\n  ]\r\n}\r\n<\/script>\r\n\r\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\">\r\n{\r\n  \"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\r\n  \"@type\":\"TechArticle\",\r\n  \"headline\":\"MIM Gears for Small Precision Metal Transmission Parts\",\r\n  \"description\":\"Engineering review guide for metal injection molded gears, including MIM suitability, MIM vs PM vs CNC boundaries, gear type routing, DFM risks, material review, inspection points, and RFQ inputs.\",\r\n  \"mainEntityOfPage\":{\r\n    \"@type\":\"WebPage\",\r\n    \"@id\":\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/mim-parts\/gears\/\"\r\n  },\r\n  \"image\":[\r\n    \"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/01-small-precision-mim-gear-parts.webp\",\r\n    \"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/02-mim-pm-cnc-gear-decision-map.webp\",\r\n    \"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/03-mim-gear-type-suitability-map-1.webp\",\r\n    \"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/04-mim-gear-dfm-risk-map.webp\",\r\n    \"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/05-mim-gear-rfq-review-checklist.webp\"\r\n  ],\r\n  \"author\":{\r\n    \"@type\":\"Organization\",\r\n    \"name\":\"XTMIM Engineering Team\",\r\n    \"url\":\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/\"\r\n  },\r\n  \"publisher\":{\r\n    \"@type\":\"Organization\",\r\n    \"name\":\"XTMIM\",\r\n    \"url\":\"https:\/\/xtmim.com\/\"\r\n  },\r\n  \"about\":[\r\n    \"Metal injection molded gears\",\r\n    \"MIM gear manufacturability\",\r\n    \"MIM vs PM gears\",\r\n    \"MIM gear DFM\",\r\n    \"Gear RFQ review\"\r\n  ],\r\n  \"keywords\":\"MIM gears, metal injection molded gears, MIM vs PM gears, micro gears, helical gears, gear DFM, gear RFQ review\",\r\n  \"audience\":{\r\n    \"@type\":\"Audience\",\r\n    \"audienceType\":\"Design engineers, sourcing managers, project managers, and OEM buyers evaluating small precision metal gear manufacturing routes\"\r\n  }\r\n}\r\n<\/script>\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>MIM Gears for Small Precision Metal Parts MIM Parts \u00b7 Gear Manufacturing Review MIM Gears for Small Precision Metal Transmission Parts Metal injection molded gears are worth reviewing when the gear is small, complex, production-volume, and difficult to manufacture economically by machining or conventional powder metallurgy. 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