Summary: | The gear manufacturing method is an important determinant of their performance and service life. Surface hardness and dimensional accuracy play a significant influence in determining wear and contact fatigue in gears. This study’s goal was to measure the gear profile dimensions and surface behavior of nodular cast iron made using the chill casting technique. Chill plates made of 304 stainless steel with thicknesses of 0.2, 0.4, and 0.6 mm were used to provide good surface cooling rates during the chill casting of gears performed using open molds of silica sand. Chill plates are plated onto the walls of the mold, and then the molten material is poured at 1400 °C. The obtained gears were tested using photographs, microstructures, SEM-EDX, microhardness, wear, and dimensional measurements. The thickness of the chill plate can affect the hardening process of the gear surface. Thicker chill plates result in slower cooling rates, resulting in a more homogeneous microstructure and increasing the hardness level of the hardened layer. Whereas thinner chill plates result in a faster cooling rate, which results in a higher hardness and wear resistance of the hardened layer. Reducing the thickness of the chill plate from 0.6 mm to 0.2 mm increases the cooling rate and increases the amount of diffusion that can occur. The results showed that M<sub>7</sub>C<sub>3</sub> and the (FeCrC)<sub>7</sub>C<sub>3</sub> matrices were formed, with an average hardness within a range of 700–994.96 HV. A chill plate with a thickness of 0.4 mm produces gear with the best accuracy and precision.
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