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Parts for your 2015 Ford Everest-Brake shoes

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2015 Ford Everest brake shoes – what they do and when to service them

Technical references point to brake shoes being used on the 2015 Ford Everest. The Ford Everest UA (2015–on) Workshop Manual (Section 206-05 Parking Brake), Ford’s global parts catalogue for Everest, and Australian/NZ aftermarket catalogues (e.g., Bendix, Repco) all show the Everest running rear disc brakes for service braking, plus a drum-in-hat parking brake that uses a pair of internal brake shoes. So “brake-shoes” are relevant on this model — they’re for the parking brake, not the main stopping power.

On a 2015 Ford Everest, the brake shoes live inside the “hat” of the rear brake rotors. Their job is to hold the vehicle still when parked, especially on hills, independently of the hydraulic disc brake system. When the handbrake is applied, the shoes expand against the small internal drum surface of the rotor hat to lock the rear wheels. It’s a neat, compact setup that gives the Everest strong hill-holding without affecting normal disc-brake performance.

As part of regular servicing, it pays to have the parking brake shoes inspected whenever the rear wheels are off — typically at pad or rotor work, or around every 40,000–60,000 km, depending on use. A technician will check shoe lining thickness, glazing, cracking, or contamination from oil/grease, and inspect the drum surface inside the rotor hat. If the shoes are worn thin, contaminated, or the hardware is tired, replacement as an axle set is the go. It’s smart to renew the springs and adjuster hardware at the same time, then adjust the handbrake so it holds firmly without needing heaps of lever travel.

Signs the Everest’s parking brake shoes need attention include excessive lever travel, poor holding on an incline, scraping noises from the rear when the handbrake is on, or a hot/brake smell after parking. If the internal drum surface is scored, the rear rotors may need machining or replacement to restore a clean contact patch. After any work, the bed-in process and correct adjustment are important so the shoes bite evenly and the handbrake performs properly. Staying on top of this keeps the Everest compliant for WOF/RWC checks and gives confidence when parking nose-up with a boat on the back.

  • Check: lining thickness, glazing/cracks, contamination, hardware condition
  • Replace: shoes in pairs, springs/adjusters as needed