Brake Drum Puller

RedMF40

Not from Iceland!
A little show and tell. I have a 1966 Citroën 2CV that I’m hopefully bringing back to life. Rear brake drums were stuck, beating on them didn’t work. Just needed to get in there to inspect the brakes.

This puller I built did a fantastic job. I have to say though that I was cranking so hard on it for so long that I felt like the drum was going to come flying off when it finally broke free. Fortunately that didn’t happen. I did stand clear, however.

THREE lug nuts hold the wheels on. Yes, three. And a hub nut holds the brake drum. It gets torqued to about 250 ft lbs.
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A little show and tell. I have a 1966 Citroën 2CV that I’m hopefully bringing back to life. Rear brake drums were stuck, beating on them didn’t work. Just needed to get in there to inspect the brakes.

This puller I built did a fantastic job. I have to say though that I was cranking so hard on it for so long that I felt like the drum was going to come flying off when it finally broke free. Fortunately that didn’t happen. I did stand clear, however.

THREE lug nuts hold the wheels on. Yes, three. And a hub nut holds the brake drum. It gets torqued to about 250 ft lbs. View attachment 154834
View attachment 154835
First: great job on "make a tool". Second: a 2CV is not exactly run of the mill and congratulations on having one. I'm looking forward to updates.
 
First: great job on "make a tool". Second: a 2CV is not exactly run of the mill and congratulations on having one. I'm looking forward to updates.
I’ve been looking for a while, finally found one locally for money I was willing to part with. Definitely a project. I have the cylinder heads back from the machine shop and also put in new piston rings. The motor was tired, but overall in good shape. If I come across a 602 cc engine I’ll probably do a swap. Mine has the 435 cc motor, I’ll be sure to stay off the interstates.
 
gees, if it took that much pressure, is the drums salvageable? Usually when they are hard to get off the shoes have worn a groove into the drum.
Brake shoes looked almost brand new. The drums on these cars are notorious for being difficult to remove and are often stuck. Possibly because the hub nut is torqued so tight? Not a matter of just undoing the lug nuts and sliding the drum off. I’m learning as I go along.
 
I've got the old style hub puller made to pull drums and hubs like on an 8N or old Mopar. It's the HD one that you can hit with a hammer to turn. Usually they will lend you one at AutoZone.
 
Puts things in perspective. 1966. We had 10 years of v8 tbirds, 428 Ford galaxies, 2 years of affordable Mustangs, de finned Cadillacs, the GTO, et cetera. French had that!
 
I remember the Renault 5 was a terror on French roads in the 80s. Owners did all kinds of mods to the motor and suspension and it had a turbo version as well. They sold it here as “Le Car.” Just seemed like a typical underpowered Econo box, maybe they sent us a Watered-down version.

The standout feature of the 2CV is the suspension. It was designed to crawl over the worst country roads and keep all four feet on the ground. A local expert told me the designers expected a car to last about seven years. Pretty flimsy sheetmetal, prone to rusting out.
 
I remember the Renault 5 was a terror on French roads in the 80s. Owners did all kinds of mods to the motor and suspension and it had a turbo version as well. They sold it here as “Le Car.” Just seemed like a typical underpowered Econo box, maybe they sent us a Watered-down version.

The standout feature of the 2CV is the suspension. It was designed to crawl over the worst country roads and keep all four feet on the ground. A local expert told me the designers expected a car to last about seven years. Pretty flimsy sheetmetal, prone to rusting out.
It appeared in some great movie scenes.
 
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