I need a photo of the pinion too.
Keep in mind not every pinion fits every bevel. But something else is off by a lot. The tips of the bevel teeth aren't as worth. Suggesting the motor height is way too high. A pinion with fatter teeth basically needs to sit edge to edge with the bevel. Thinner teeth pinions will set higher where you can't see the edge of the pinion teeth. After than you shim the pinion bevel tight but with a .3mm to .5mm gap.
If the shell bottom is ground improperly it can seat the grip off. The grip should be sanded so it doesn't rest all its pressure on the lower receiver and sits flush on the gearbox, unless the receiver is a better fit than the gearbox, which happens. The grip hole should not touch the motor tower first, the motor tower should contact the gearbox hole first. This will screw up the motor angle checker tool.
Another thing, a ton if gearbox shell manufacturers modified molds to make their 6mm or 7mm gearboxes into 8mm gearboxes. Because of this some brands poorly centered the hole and the bushing or bearing will sit off center, making the pinion wreck the bevel as it's not lined up. Even some high end cnced gearboxes such as the beloved retro arms shells have improper 8mm bearing holes due to inability to properly design a gearbox for some reason. So if your bushing/bearing is off it would cause insane wear like this, and the gearbox/motor grip would clamp down on the angle tester giving a false impression its passing the test.
The gearbox itself could also be sitting back tilting. Either due to fitment or other issues. If the grip is resting on the lower but the gearbox is tilted back from fitment issues or tightening the stock screw first it will cause alignment issues.
Best of luck.
Oh and this wear has nothing to do with the spring, rps or anything. I have plenty of high rps builds running every weekend that have very little wear on the bevel and pinion. You will likely see a rps improvement once you fix this issue and the aeg will become super quiet.
Keep in mind not every pinion fits every bevel. But something else is off by a lot. The tips of the bevel teeth aren't as worth. Suggesting the motor height is way too high. A pinion with fatter teeth basically needs to sit edge to edge with the bevel. Thinner teeth pinions will set higher where you can't see the edge of the pinion teeth. After than you shim the pinion bevel tight but with a .3mm to .5mm gap.
If the shell bottom is ground improperly it can seat the grip off. The grip should be sanded so it doesn't rest all its pressure on the lower receiver and sits flush on the gearbox, unless the receiver is a better fit than the gearbox, which happens. The grip hole should not touch the motor tower first, the motor tower should contact the gearbox hole first. This will screw up the motor angle checker tool.
Another thing, a ton if gearbox shell manufacturers modified molds to make their 6mm or 7mm gearboxes into 8mm gearboxes. Because of this some brands poorly centered the hole and the bushing or bearing will sit off center, making the pinion wreck the bevel as it's not lined up. Even some high end cnced gearboxes such as the beloved retro arms shells have improper 8mm bearing holes due to inability to properly design a gearbox for some reason. So if your bushing/bearing is off it would cause insane wear like this, and the gearbox/motor grip would clamp down on the angle tester giving a false impression its passing the test.
The gearbox itself could also be sitting back tilting. Either due to fitment or other issues. If the grip is resting on the lower but the gearbox is tilted back from fitment issues or tightening the stock screw first it will cause alignment issues.
Best of luck.
Oh and this wear has nothing to do with the spring, rps or anything. I have plenty of high rps builds running every weekend that have very little wear on the bevel and pinion. You will likely see a rps improvement once you fix this issue and the aeg will become super quiet.