I went to work on the rear brakes, starting with the left side.
Here is what I started with, the hub rusted to the back plate, and everything pretty filthy.
A few hammer blows and I was able to separate the hub and axles.
The brake adjuster is rusted completely in place, so I'm glad that I ordered a new pair 'just in case' I'll have to get these un-frozen and cleaned up at a later date.
Here's some 'creative' british car repair for you... one of the springs to hold down the shoes was cracked almost entirely in half... and held back together with a tiny zip tie
Everything now disassembled (except for the adjuster, which was frozen, as mentioned above)
After some sandblasting, painting, etc, and getting a lot of new parts from various manufacturers, reassembly!
Getting the bottom spring plate in to hold the new cylinder can be quite a pain. The lock plate goes on fairly easy, and then the last plate took me 10 minutes of fiddling just to get under there, but everything is held in place now
I then put the new adjuster on. I had to pause and run to the hardware store here, because the adjuster didn't come with any nuts, and the 1/4 28tpi size isnt something that I keep around in stock.
Next I had to get the shoes and springs installed. On this side you can see that I'm using a larger cylinder. This is the 7/8 cylinder that Good Parts sells. These new springs are FAR stronger than the worn out old ones that I removed
Finally I installed new springs and retainers, and everything is assembled, I took care to make sure that the retainer springs face the right direction as indicated in the Bentley manual
If anyone notices anything that I may have done wrong, let me know!