Handbrake shoes continued.......
Ok, so you've got your caliper and disc off, and the caliper is tied up out of the way. This is where the fun really starts.
You'll see a star adjuster sitting at 12'o'clock between the shoes. Wind this off to almost max. Not too far though as it will eventually buckle under itself, causing yet more problems.
I hope you've had your Wheetabix, cause your going to need it. Try and undo as many of the springs as possible. The one on the backing plate should be easy. Others won't be.
Next up is depressing the springs on the pins to get the caps off. Don't be fooled by how easy these come off, as you still have to get the buggers back on yet.
Now try and stretch the shoes apart, (easier said than done). hopefully after several trips to A&E to stitch back on missing fingers, you should have done this.
Now everything should be dissassembled? Cue lots of brake cleaner to tidy the job up, use of the cheapo dremmel to clean the hub and start re-assembling. Good luck!
Copperslip aplenty on the metal to metal areas, smearing it on the springs. Now all you've got to do is get those innocent looking springs back over the pins, and the caps in place. What could possibly go wrong?
Well, here's where that third arm I asked you to grow comes in handy, as does the patience of a saint.
So here's my top tips....
1; before even starting this job, I wish I'd taken the car to have the pins tack-welded into place on the back of the backing plate. This would have stopped the dam things rotating with the spring / cap every time I tried to get them back on.
2; if you are having real trouble getting the springs to compress, rotate, and the caps back on, then cut out a link from the little springs. Carefull not to take too much out of it though.
3; have a few spare caps handy, (not the sort that go on your head, but the ones that go over the shoes retaining pins), as these caps soon get chewed up.
4; remember the cheapo pair of needle nosed pliers I suggested you got? well now is the time to use them, assuming you have thinned them out a hell of a lot with your angle grinder.
On each side is two pins. One willbe alright(ish). The other won't. I wasted one full day getting the pins on one side, and two days doing the other. bear this in mind, and please don't expect changing the handbrake shoes to be an easy or quick job.
My 2003 omega has 94'000 on the clock. My handbrake was next to useless, but the handbrake shoes only looked about 30-40% worn, (I'd already bought the parts and decieded to do the job). What I think was the cause of my near enough in-op handbrake was a lack of any adjustment being used on the star adjusters on the drums, plus the severe wear on the 'drum' part of my rear discs.
In hindsight, (such a wonderfull thing), I reckon that if I had replaced the discs and fiddled with the adjusters, then the car would likely have done 200'000 miles without the need for the handbrake shoes to be replaced.
Whipping the discs on and off, even a couple of times, is a hell of a lot easier than changing the handbrake shoes,
Anyway, a few pics of the completed job;
old v new rear pads

shoes done (eventually!)

caliper on, pads in

Once your disc is back on, don't forget to wind the star adjuster through the hole in your disc untill the shoes bite the drum, then wind it off one notch.