OK, here's how I do them and it's also the way the factory recommends to do them;-
Primary Gear Bushes;-
I've found the last few bushes I've fitted to be a little tighter than those before, so turn up a mandrel that you can use to push them in to place, though by all accounts, this shouldn't be needed, but ,,,,,,
I machine the old ones out, but I don't go 'all the way' only make them thin enough to get something soft-ish behind them and bend the front one in and the back one (top hat) usually cracks.
Clean the tunnels of the gear, I find Paint Thinners really good for this, then don't touch them.
Freeze the new Bushes in Dry Ice (and this is also the advice of the factory). I get my Dry Ice from BOC Gases (not sure who you may have near to you), it's fairly cheap and they sell it by the KG. Depending how far away you are from your supplier, in part will determine how much you should but, just take an Esky. Of course, don't handle it with the bare hands either! The Freezer is no where near cold enough.
Bag up (separately) the bushes in plastic bags (the press seal ones are ideal) and cover them in the dry ice. The factory say 10 minutes is enough, but I leave them in for at least an hour. If you've made Mandrels, put them on ice too. While they are getting cold, I boil up some water and put the Primary Gear in that to expand it a tad.
When everything is ready to go, fit the bushes in. They should litterally drop in, need to be square on and they will be a neat fit, but as I say, the last couple I had to shove in (I do them in the press, but next to no force is needed), you need to have everything set up to go and have a couple of practice runs as you have about 30 - 40 second of working time!
I tend to do 3 or 4 primary gears at a time, to get the most from the dry ice. The others that I'm not fitting, I leave until needed, but then it's a matter of machining to size.
Once they are in, leave them overnight as a minimum to normalise.
I machine the bushes to suit the crank they are actually going on to. Factory Running Clearance is 0.003 to 0.0045". I do aim for 0.0035" but under the hat part of the back (top hat) bush, I now put a small taper on them, just so it's about 0.004" under the hat itself. Reason being, as there is more material here, and the thrust face, this part of the bush expands more (both outwards and inwards) and I've noticed on a few that they show signs of just starting to pick up but only under the hat. I like to run the tighter clearance as it gives the most bearing area to to crank then.
After machining, soak the gear in Hot (~800C) Oil (I use a 20W40 for this) for at least 4 hours, though I tend to leave them on all day! I use a small deep fryer for this, but don't let it sit on the base as with some of them will have high spot temps! I just sit them up on a couple of head studs. After the hot oil treatment DO NOT de-grease the gear ever - if you do, re-do the hot oil treatment again. I wipe down the outside of the gear with paper towel and then stand it up (in a bag usually) while I do the rest on the engine build, fit it up and only once the transfer housing is in place, then de-grease the splines for the clutch. I do that with paper towel and thinners, a few goes and you'll get it dry.
Some of this is in the Aust Factory Workshop Manual, though strangely, I've not yet read it in any UK manual.
I know doing the bushes this way is a bit of mucking about, however, I've found by doing them this way, they just don't wear. The longest running one that I've done was in a friend's Moke and that was ~25 years and ~300 000 km ago. While we haven't had it out for check, it's showing no signs of any problem.