microman said:
I was wondering if there is a quick and reasonably approximate way to convert the impact force into tonnage,if the mass of the hammer is known,velocity of the strike is measured ?
No.
In theory, there is, but there are too many variables to make it practical. Some of the variables include:
Hardness of the hammer face
How straight the hammer hits it
Velocity of the hammer at impact
Steel vs dead blow hammer
Mass of the hammer
Mass of the bushing
Mass of the housing
Mass of what the housing is setting on
Elasticity (springiness) of the bushing
Elasticity of the housing
Elasticity of what the housing is setting on
Some of these variables drop out under certain specific cases, but they all factor into a calculation. Your best bet is do the press fit calculation. If you do not want to do that, just go out and buy a Harbor Freight 10 ton press, and try. If it gets the job done, use it until the press falls apart, then get a better press. If it pushes the bushing halfway and stalls, get a 50 ton press. If it barely starts the bushing, try again with a 100 ton press. A local machine shop will have a press, you could hire them to press in a few bushings, and report the peak force from the gauge on the press.
Note that I use shrink fits and press fits interchangeably. In both cases, parts are assembled with an interence fit. The only difference is that shrink fits use heat to eliminate the interference during assembly, while press fits force the parts together.