Two ways to go that I'm aware of, Slick.
1) I have an acquaintance who drills out the old tube by coming at it from each side of the manifold. NOTE: the drill size is different for the two ends of the tube!
2) Being paranoid about the drill bits tracking correctly, I took a piece of 3/8 inch diameter cold rolled steel round stock and turned it down on a lathe to the appropriate diameter for one end of the replacement tube inside and outside diameter. This amounts to being a driver for tube removal.
With the driver, to date, I've only needed to drive on one end of the tube to accomplish removal of the intake manifold choke heat tubes. For a reason I can't remember, my driver was made to fit the mushroom end of the heat tube. -Perhaps fear of breakage of the cast iron intake manifold exhaust bypass section that mates with the cylinder head on the choke housing side?
The driver end of the 3/8 inch rod was turned to a dimensions of .269 for the smaller diameter x 1/2 inch in length, and .342 for the larger diameter x 3/4 inch in length. I doubt that the smaller I.D. was critical other than being smaller than the actual I.D. of the tube to permit inward crush of the tube as needed when being driven.
These dimensions have worked for removal of FoMoCo B6A-9890-A heat tubes. I have yet to remove the heat tubes on a '57 Ford dual quad manifold. I know that the heat tubes are different in length than the single quad units...
Hope this helps.
NoShortcuts
a.k.a. Charlie Brown
near Syracuse, New York