ThanksBrake pliers for drum brakes. Mainly for the springs.
Along with the brake spring pliers and the tool to remove the hold down washers and springs a good set of needle nose Vise Grips is a must have !I sent a Youtuber one of these so he could show how to do drums correctly. About a year later he did a drum brake video and used pliers and a screwdriver to remove and install the springs. I was like WTF!

There’s still a lot of vehicles on the road that have drum brakes. It goes to show how much of a mystery drum brake service is to many. Even some auto techs and car guys aren’t well versed in them.I think these might be an example of a tool that was once commonplace but, now not so much. kind of like the 4 mm ratcheting wrench used to adjust crown vic headlamps. I am surprised though and feel a bit like a dinosaur, that a pair of brake spring pliers was listed under a What is it? thread.![]()
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Haha, so true!. Time marches on, and things get left behind. I'm 68, drove used cars all my life, and have done a lot of DIY drum brake jobs. But when I first found a pair of these drum brake pliers at a yard sale about 5 years ago, I didn't know what they were either without researching. I never used them.I think these might be an example of a tool that was once commonplace but, now not so much. kind of like the 4 mm ratcheting wrench used to adjust crown vic headlamps. I am surprised though and feel a bit like a dinosaur, that a pair of brake spring pliers was listed under a What is it? thread.![]()
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The Candian government? I've never heard of anything like that.After people realized the efficiency of disc brakes the government had to force manufacturers to continue making cars with drum brakes on the rear for years because there was such a huge stockpile of asbestos lined shoes for drum brakes. Had it not been for that abundant stockpile drum brakes would have gone out many years earlier.
That makes no sense at all. Drum brakes are used because its very easy to design a cable operated parking/ebrake system for them. Same reason why they're used on trailers.After people realized the efficiency of disc brakes the government had to force manufacturers to continue making cars with drum brakes on the rear for years because there was such a huge stockpile of asbestos lined shoes for drum brakes. Had it not been for that abundant stockpile drum brakes would have gone out many years earlier.
Any reference you can share confirming that? What government? What market? Sounds like BS, frankly.After people realized the efficiency of disc brakes the government had to force manufacturers to continue making cars with drum brakes on the rear for years because there was such a huge stockpile of asbestos lined shoes for drum brakes. Had it not been for that abundant stockpile drum brakes would have gone out many years earlier.
Just like they forced the horse and buggy on the public for years after the automobile was invented. Government protecting private enterprise!After people realized the efficiency of disc brakes the government had to force manufacturers to continue making cars with drum brakes on the rear for years because there was such a huge stockpile of asbestos lined shoes for drum brakes. Had it not been for that abundant stockpile drum brakes would have gone out many years earlier.
Drum brakes are used because they are better. They have more friction material and contact area, and use the rotation of the drum to reinforce stopping power. Discs are cheaper to make, and do provide good stopping on light vehicles, and are more trouble free. Not all parking brakes use the rear drums. Some use the driveshaft.
+1 I did my fair share of them too w/o the tool, the tool is a big help! Well worth having if you still have something with drum brakes.I can't tell you how many drum brake jobs I did without this tool.
What a PITA!
Stopping is a function of pad area and surface area. Drum brakes are better at both. Drums don’t warp like discs do. Discs look cleaner, have less moving parts, simplify design. I would rather have drums.Disk brakes are making serious inroads in heavy duty trucks. Something approaching 30% of new tractors have air disks, and a bit less than 20% of trailers do. They have better stopping performance, require less maintenance, and increase fleet safety. They do cost more, and still weigh more (I think, weights have come down a lot).
Stopping is a function of pad area and surface area. Drum brakes are better at both. Drums don’t warp like discs do. Discs look cleaner, have less moving parts, simplify design. I would rather have drums.
Stopping is about turning kinetic energy into heat, and then removing that heat from the brake components. Disk brakes are vastly superior for that, because it's easier to get air flow at the parts generating the heat.Stopping is a function of pad area and surface area. Drum brakes are better at both. Drums don’t warp like discs do. Discs look cleaner, have less moving parts, simplify design. I would rather have drums.
The Candian government? I've never heard of anything like that.
I don't mind drum brakes on the rear, they are much more reliable then rear disc brakes up here in the rust belt.
That makes no sense at all. Drum brakes are used because its very easy to design a cable operated parking/ebrake system for them. Same reason why they're used on trailers.
Disc brakes require a hydraulic system or in the case of parking/ebrakes they are usually a combination of electric and hydraulic. They're much more complicated with more failure points and also make brake jobs more annoying since they'll require a bidirectional scan tool or some other mechanism to deactivate the brakes.
Any reference you can share confirming that? What government? What market? Sounds like BS, frankly.
Toyota has used drum brakes on the rear of our Tacomas forever. Despite us owners wishing for four-wheel discs, I gotta admit the drums are fabulously reliable and long-wearing. They work.
