I'm trying to get some pictures up on photobucket this afternoon but it is playing funny buggers. I'll do a write up on the rear brakes instead.
health warning
Brake dust can be extremely nasty. Much like steel dust, it can contain carcinogens and all kinds of stuff that you don't want inside you.
Brakes with the drum off. Drivers side.
Top of the shoe with the most wear.
Take the spring off that is about half way down on each shoe, then remove the top and bottom springs.
Everything comes off coated in brake dust.
take this mechanism (it screws in and out between the shoes), and roughly mark where it was screwed up to. To the best of my knowledge, its to set up the handbrake/shoe position.
health warning
Brake dust can be extremely nasty. Much like steel dust, it can contain carcinogens and all kinds of stuff that you don't want inside you.
Shoe off, you can see where the wheel cylinder was leaking. Hence, a soft brake pedal.
The drivers side only has one brake line screwed into the wheel cylinder, through the backing plate. Use a brake line spanner to avoid rounding off the head of the threaded fitting.
Remove the two nuts as well holding the wheel cylinder. If the bolt itself begins to unscrew, that is ok. (you'll see why later).
These are the double threaded bolts. The passenger side wheel cylinder came fitted with new ones, the drivers side did not. I suggest re-using the old one with the old nut rather than trying to do a rough job with a new, non double threaded "generic" bolt. Once you screw the bolt into the new wheel cylinder, you can tighten it up with a brake line spanner on the nut.
Sounds like gobbledeegook but it makes sense once you take one apart and put a new wheel cylinder back in.
Wheel cylinders.
note: never assume both sides of the car will have the same wheel cylinder. 929's and RX-4s have a distinct left and right.
They almost look identical, but the drivers side has the top thread for a bleed nipple, the passenger side has two threads for brake lines. There is no bleed nipple.
new passenger side wheel cylinder. Note it has the bolts already.
There were no nuts in the box though so don't loose your old ones.
Probably the trickiest bit was getting the brake lines into the new wheel cylinder. The tubing has a bit of give in it, but remember, this is 30+ year old metal, try not to bend it too much or it will fatigue.
New shoes vs old shoes. See how the old ones are a bit squarer in how the material is bonded to the shoe itself. The old one has a bigger pad area as well
It's a poor photo but you can see how the new shoe has longer linings bonded to it. Hopefully this doesn't mean anything (ie the lining dragging etc)
This is how I put the shoes back in. It may not be the right way, but I found it works.
1. Put both shoes into the notch down at the bottom of the brake area.
Like this, then push through the pin from the back of the backing plate, slide over the collar, spring and top collar, then turn the pin so that the top collar retains the spring. There are two springs and pins (one for each shoe). Do both or else the shoe will fall out.
Put the bottom (the skinnier) spring in). You may need long nose pliers, etc. I find swearing helps.
The next bit is tricky.
The mechanism that I pointed out before:
Put this back in between the shoes. It will only go one way. You may need to wind it in or out. I found that winding it all the way in, then putting the top spring in made it a lot easier. I could then adjust the ratchet mechanism (I'm not sure that ratchet is the right word, but it will do) after I had the top spring in.
You want this:
Spring in, ready to be sprung? Strung?
Result:
And
Now my handbrake cables are pretty stretched, but basically there is a mechanism at the handbrake lever where you can wind the cable in. What you want is a handbrake that should only take two clicks to be on, three clicks at the most to be jammed on tight.
Put the drum on, then try the handbrake. Because I wound on that rod to its lowest setting, I had to spin the ratchet (!) nut a few times with a flat bladed screw driver.
In the end I had it so that the pads were not dragging against the drum when the handbrake was off, but the handbrake jammed the pads on tightly when the handbrake was on. Once the car is mobile, I'll adjust it all again and bed the shoes in. Where I made the mark on the adjustment rod was roughly where it was when I had finished, minus a few mm (given that they were used shoes and I replaced them with nice fat new ones), so I think I was pretty close to the previous settings.