A brake drum is a cylindrical-shaped component attached to the wheel hub. Instead of pads clamping onto a disc (like in disc brakes), brake shoes press outward against the inside of the drum, creating friction to slow or stop the vehicle.
Think of it as the “opposite” of a brake rotor: the friction happens inside the drum, not on the outside.
⚙️ How Brake Drums Work
- The brake pedal sends hydraulic pressure to the wheel cylinder.
- The wheel cylinder pushes the brake shoes outward.
- The shoes press against the inner surface of the brake drum.
- Friction slows down the drum → which slows down the wheel.
🛠️ Parts of a Drum Brake Assembly
- Brake Drum – The rotating cylinder attached to the wheel.
- Brake Shoes – Curved friction material that presses outward.
- Wheel Cylinder – Hydraulic piston that pushes the shoes.
- Return Springs – Pull shoes back when braking stops.
- Backing Plate – Mounts all components.
- Adjuster Mechanism – Maintains proper shoe-to-drum clearance.
✅ Advantages of Drum Brakes
- Lower cost – Cheaper to manufacture and maintain.
- Durability – Shoes last longer than pads in some conditions.
- Better parking brake function – Cable handbrakes work very well with drums.
- More braking force at lower cost – Common in trucks and heavy vehicles.
❌ Disadvantages of Drum Brakes
- Heat buildup – Drums don’t cool as well as rotors → risk of brake fade.
- Less stopping power – Disc brakes are generally stronger and more efficient.
- Heavier design – Adds more weight to the vehicle.
- Maintenance – More parts (springs, adjusters) to service compared to disc brakes.
🚙 Where They’re Used Today
- Rear wheels of budget cars – To reduce manufacturing cost.
- Trucks & buses – Larger drums provide strong braking force.
- Parking brakes – Even some disc-brake vehicles use small drum mechanisms inside the rotor for handbrakes.