The bushings, on ALL gen sets, are something that NEVER get changed, unless broken. For all the hoo-haw concerning RESET, its not a part changed. And it should be, on high hour/age gen sets. I was told by a CECOM rep, to always look for cracked bushing on the TQG's. He told me applying silicone grease to them prevented cracking. Its a combination of age, vibration, and normal deterioration of rubber products exposed to air, heat other elements. The makeup of the bushings is different from machine to machine. For instance, the MEP-802 and MEP-803 gen sets, do NOT use the same bushings. Different hardness of materials.
The 002A and 003A do use the same bushings. BUT, the 002A has some extra "bumpers" to help control the vibrations from beating the skid to death.
I once found a gen set in a corner, (this was before RESET) a MEP-802A. It had four completely failed bushings. The centrifugal force of the fan, forced the engine to the right, and main gen to the left, when the last bushing failed. The engine pressed on/rested on, the optima battery. It wore a hole in the battery case, and shorted out the battery. The fan chewed up the fan guard, and some other metal odds and ends. Lots of other damaged. The set was fixable. But no one wanted to wait months, maybe years, for the parts to come in. Many damaged parts had no NSN, and could only be ordered using a 1348-6, "Non NSN" requisition. Without CECOM direct intervention, this set would never have been repaired. So the bushings are important, but seldom looked at.