Aurtet,
There are actually tow different pieces to the bushing. One is the brass bushing itself with the grease hole and grooves. This is a simple press fit into the right axle tube section--one for each side. There are also two hardened steel bearings that are fixed to the axle connecting pin. These ride in the brass liners when the right axle tube is connected to the diffferential housing. Replacement of these can be a problem since they are a press fit to the connecting pin. I just went through the process of replacing these as well as the brass bushings. I completely destroyed a brand new connecting pin by trying to drive the pin through these hardened steel bearings--the end of the pin mushroomed beyond use. Fortunatley, Joe Alexander has sent me another pin. In the meantime, I've experimented and found a much better way to attack the steel bearings. Before trying to assemble the conencting pin and shims, super cool the connecting pin with some dry ice and heat one steel bearing with a heat gun. If the back end of your connecting pin is mushrooned slightly, you will have to slip on the large round bearing plate and shim that fit against the large retaining clip on the back end of the pin. With the pin super cooled and the steel bushing heated, you should be able to press it on to the pin with very little force. If your using a new pin, you can install the bushing from the rea and it only needs to be pushed on about an tow inches and a half or so. It should be pressed to the rear of the pin up to the point where the original previoulsy left a tell-tale mark on the connecting pin. The other steel bushing should simply be pressed into the foward eye of the right axle tube inside the brass lining. With the connecting pin assembled as described, you can now set the axle shims up in proper sequence with the rubber o-ring seals. Grease up the connecting pin and you should be able to drive the pin back in through the two eyes with considerably less force than if you tried to drive through both steel bushings. The key is the partial assembly of the connecting pin with one steel bushing--the rear one --attached. Otherwise you're trying to drive through tow very tight fittings and will undoubtedly mushroom the pin beyond use like I did. The dry ice and the grease make this assembly really easy to do. Hope this explanation helps.
George Des