
make your own rear drum adjuster tool
- steptoe
- Master Member
- Posts: 11582
- Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 10:00 am
- Location: 14 miles outside Gotham City
make your own rear drum adjuster tool
been staring at me for some time
all you need is a cheapy 1/4" drive socket or two, either some welding skills to weld two sockets together ending up with a double ended 1?4" square at each end or able to drill a hole through said socket at 120 degrees for a cross bar - would beat struggling with a shifter when wheels , wide or otherwise are fitted

- Silverbullet
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2920
- Joined: Mon Aug 23, 2010 6:20 pm
- Location: Adelaide
Can't remember how I used to do it, I think it was something like a 4 or 6mm spanner using the open end, or a very small shifter. Used to do it so infrequently, never gave it much thought. Brake drums are a thing of the past for me now though 

Will it ever end!?
-EA81 TWIN CARB!!!!
-L series 5 speed
-Custom paint job
-2" lift
-Full custom re-wire
-L series front end

-EA81 TWIN CARB!!!!
-L series 5 speed
-Custom paint job
-2" lift
-Full custom re-wire
-L series front end

- steptoe
- Master Member
- Posts: 11582
- Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 10:00 am
- Location: 14 miles outside Gotham City
I always resorted to a shifter due to the angle not really working witha 6mm open end (box) spanner - would slip off 
I think the drums are supposed to be adjusted each oil change interval and that is how I have been doing it for years. After doing new shoes, machined drums and adjust every 10,000 km when I went discs after 100,000km there was minimal wear on the linings ( so must be the drums wearing?) figured the rear drum brakes do stuff all. The rear discs made all the difference in the braking performance dept. My replacement Brumby has drums and a dealer service sticker, 70 km since the dealer seen it and drums needed a good adjust
Maybe they did not actually service the vehicle due to its condition.

I think the drums are supposed to be adjusted each oil change interval and that is how I have been doing it for years. After doing new shoes, machined drums and adjust every 10,000 km when I went discs after 100,000km there was minimal wear on the linings ( so must be the drums wearing?) figured the rear drum brakes do stuff all. The rear discs made all the difference in the braking performance dept. My replacement Brumby has drums and a dealer service sticker, 70 km since the dealer seen it and drums needed a good adjust

got drums on your daily driver ?Silverbullet wrote: Brake drums are a thing of the past for me now though
- Silverbullet
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2920
- Joined: Mon Aug 23, 2010 6:20 pm
- Location: Adelaide
Nopesteptoe wrote:
got drums on your daily driver ?

Yep the discs are great, but ask any brake expert and they'll tell you rear disc conversion won't make much difference, and that drums are actually more efficient...the new found braking confidence after the conversion tells you otherwise. Just hope new/replacement discs aren't as hard to find as the rest of the set up

I'm sure they were meant to be adjusted at each oil change, like a lot of things. Have you ever read the factory new car service schedule? Found I think in the original owners manual which comes with the car (which I still have for my wagon in the red plastic pouch

Will it ever end!?
-EA81 TWIN CARB!!!!
-L series 5 speed
-Custom paint job
-2" lift
-Full custom re-wire
-L series front end

-EA81 TWIN CARB!!!!
-L series 5 speed
-Custom paint job
-2" lift
-Full custom re-wire
-L series front end

- steptoe
- Master Member
- Posts: 11582
- Joined: Thu Oct 06, 2005 10:00 am
- Location: 14 miles outside Gotham City
yeah, those brake experts need some education eh ? Reading posts over the years, I think some car enthusiast are surprised any component on a car is a serviceable/replaceable item - plugs , leads , cap and rotor
If we had a buck for every PCV valve been changed on any car - even at the dealer - wouldn't be so rich 

