Parking brake service?

Tiny
BRADYDANIEL
  • MEMBER
  • 2000 CHRYSLER TOWN AND COUNTRY
  • 6 CYL
  • 2WD
  • AUTOMATIC
  • 140,000 MILES
I pushed the e-brake down. And now both rear wheels are locked.I cant get it to release. It Seems like the pedal is all the way back up, but wheels will not turn.I tried to pull back and forth to see if it would let go. No Luck.I don't have money to pay someone, I'm on ssi. What Can I do. Its My only car.I wish I could give money for the donation, im sorry, fife and 2 kids I just dont have any extra. Sorry
Friday, January 10th, 2014 AT 10:29 PM

3 Replies

Tiny
CARADIODOC
  • MECHANIC
  • 33,727 POSTS
There's two common things to look for depending on which system you have. If you have a handle to pull on to release the parking brake pedal, the two rear cables can become rusted on vehicles where the parking brake is not used regularly. Ford has an especially big problem with that, even when they are used often. You'll need to look underneath, ahead of the rear wheels, to see if the casings are exposed and visible where the cables come out of them. If those cables are sticking, the first half inch or so of the cables will be clean and shiny indicating they didn't retract properly. When this first starts to happen, you can often crawl under there and flex the casings to urge the cables to retract under spring pressure. By the early '90s Chrysler was putting those exposed ends in a black plastic box ahead of the left rear wheel to keep them dry and rust-free. They don't really cause very much trouble.

If you have the parking brake that is released by pressing the pedal a second time, they have a spring-loaded toothed, quarter-round gear. That unit is auto-adjusting. In cold weather the grease on that gear's pivot can become hardened and the gear doesn't move quickly under spring pressure. The pedal will come up but the parking brake won't release. What usually works for those is to push the pedal down again and release it as though you were setting it, then push it again just a little further as though you were releasing it, but hold pressure on it for five or ten seconds. That may give the gear time to slowly move under that spring pressure. If you release the pedal a little and push it again, you'll have to start over. Releasing it just a little will re-engage that toothed gear and prevent it from moving to the released position. If this is why it's not releasing, it will usually work properly after the temperature warms up inside and that grease softens.
Was this
answer
helpful?
Yes
No
+1
Saturday, January 11th, 2014 AT 1:09 AM
Tiny
MOOREJW
  • MEMBER
  • 1 POST
  • 1997 CHRYSLER TOWN AND COUNTRY
  • 3.8L
  • V6
  • FWD
  • AUTOMATIC
  • 165,000 MILES
Parking brake is very hard to get set tight enough to hold car even after manually adjusting rear brake. It looks like previous owner had some repairs made to the parking brake control and/or cable. The cable has been spliced and I am not sure it is routed properly to the "wheel" inside the control. A diagram or photo of the cable from the entry into the "controller" under the dash to the "wheel" would help. One direct route looks obvious but since it has never worked right I am looking for unexpected problems.
Was this
answer
helpful?
Yes
No
Monday, March 15th, 2021 AT 1:14 PM (Merged)
Tiny
HMAC300
  • MECHANIC
  • 48,601 POSTS
Once repairs are performed, ensure all parking brake cables are properly installed and secured in place. Using pliers, firmly and rapidly pull locking pin from clock spring.
When locking pin is removed, parking brake cables will automatically be adjusted. Apply and release parking brake one time to ensure parking brake cables are fully seated
see pics we dont' have a pic of cable going to shoes. If this is disc brake in rear it's different
Was this
answer
helpful?
Yes
No
+2
Monday, March 15th, 2021 AT 1:14 PM (Merged)

Please login or register to post a reply.

Sponsored links