Hi two things... looks like some thing is leaking in the drum, as fluid can be seen in fot on the fitting springs/mounting and it also looks like you need new shoes as it looks like the friction material is coming away from the main shoe. Yes change both sides....
Ya thickness looks ok. Just abit worried about that gap between the friction material and the shoe, looks like its breaking away. Yes change both sides and by that I mean all four shoes.
fullsunian wrote:Ya thickness looks ok. Just abit worried about that gap between the friction material and the shoe, looks like its breaking away. Yes change both sides and by that I mean all four shoes.
Isn't that friction material riveted on ( looks like a rivet there) if so they wouldn't be as close as with bonded material?
In the old days we always used to rivet our own replacement friction material and that gap would be normal.
Looks to me like you need to buy a new set of brake shoes and a fitting kit ... there's no harm in being safe. You NEVER fit half a set ... these are safety items and you would be causing an imbalance.
Ian.
The Hulley's Bus 1989 2.1DJ Trampspotter LPG courtesy of Steve @ Gasure
The fitting kit is the springs and the shoe hold-down assemblies (for one side) ... which appear to be corroded on your's. Start with a new set and you know what you're dealing with.
As for whether it's a big job ... some people find checking the oil too bigger job.
Ian
The Hulley's Bus 1989 2.1DJ Trampspotter LPG courtesy of Steve @ Gasure
Looking at how thin the brake lining material is at the top of your picture I would hazard a guess that the rivets are already touching the brake drum at that point. When this is allowed to happen the metal rivets wear groves in the drum surface, if this is the case then you will also need both rear drums replacing as well.
So parts:
New brake shoe set (that's 4 shoes in all) 2 fitting kits (springs and retaining clips) and if the drums are badly worn or scored by the rivets: a pair of brake drums.
Check the wheel cylinders carefully for leaks by pulling back the seals.
Sounds expensive? but the parts are cheaper than you think.
Going back to the original question of wether it would pass an MOT.....well the criteria for passing is braking efficiency (how much actual braking effort is being produced) brake ballance (within 10% across the same axle) and the important one here: brake condition (which we know are worn out) although I doubt an MOT tester would actually have remove the inpection plug on the back plate to have spotted that.
Martin
On wings like angels whispers sweet
my heart it feels a broken beat
Touched soul and hurt lay wounded deep
Brown eyes are lost afar now sleep xxHayleyxx