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Parts for your 2014 Ford Territory-Brake shoes

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2014 Ford Territory brake shoes — what they are and how to look after them

Brake shoes are relevant on the 2014 Ford Territory. Technical sources including the Ford SZ Territory Workshop Manual (Parking Brake — drum-in-hat), Bendix parts catalogue listings for Territory SX–SZ park brake shoes, and brake rotor catalogues from major manufacturers noting an “integral drum handbrake” confirm this model runs ventilated front discs and rear discs with an internal drum-style parking brake that uses shoes inside the rear rotor “hat”.

On a 2014 Territory, the brake shoes aren’t for stopping the car at speed — that’s the job of the disc pads. The shoes sit inside the rear disc rotor and are dedicated to the parking brake. When the handbrake is pulled, the shoes expand against the small drum surface inside the rotor, locking the rear wheels to hold the vehicle on a hill or when parked. Because they’re separate from the hydraulic system, they provide a mechanical backup to keep the SUV put even if there’s a brake fluid issue.

Over time, the friction lining on the shoes wears, glazing can reduce bite, and the mechanism can gum up with dust or rust. Tell-tale signs it’s time for attention include poor holding power on inclines, excessive lever travel, scraping or chirping from the rear when the handbrake is applied, or an MOT/WOF handbrake efficiency fail. In normal mixed driving, park brake shoes often last well beyond 100,000 km, but life varies with use (frequent steep parking or towing shortens it). It’s smart to have them inspected at each service or at least every 20,000 km.

When replacing, do both sides as an axle set. Clean the drum surface inside the rotors