Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2007 Honda Elysion-Brake shoes

Sort by
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 products

2007 Honda Elysion brake shoes — what they do and when to replace them

Based on technical sources — the Honda Elysion RR1–RR4 Brake System section of the factory service manual, the Honda Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) for 2007 model codes, and Autodata braking specifications — the 2007 Honda Elysion runs rear disc brakes for normal stopping and uses separate brake shoes inside the rear rotors for the handbrake (a drum-in-hat design). So yes, brake shoes are fitted to this vehicle, but they serve the parking/handbrake function rather than day‑to‑day braking.

On this Elysion, the brake shoes sit inside the “hat” of the rear disc rotor and expand against a small drum surface when the handbrake is applied. Their job is to hold the vehicle securely when parked, on the flat or on a hill. Because they’re not used for normal braking, they usually wear more slowly than pads — but they still age, glaze, corrode, or get contaminated, and the hardware springs can weaken over time.

For servicing, it’s smart to have the rear parking brake shoes inspected every 20,000 km or 12 months, or any time the rear rotors are off. A technician will check lining thickness (replace if the friction material is down to roughly 1.5 mm or less), look for cracking, glazing, oil contamination from a leaky hub seal, and evaluate the return springs and adjuster. If the shoes are replaced, the hardware kit should be renewed and the backing plate contact points lightly lubricated with high‑temp brake grease.

Adjustment matters. The star wheel inside the drum should be set so the shoes just “kiss” the drum and then backed off to free rotation, followed by handbrake cable free‑play adjustment per the workshop manual. Too tight and they’ll drag and overheat