The handbrake on my Fulvia has never worked properly and a day spent trying to adjust it proved fruitless. The brakes would just about come on with an almighty pull on the lever but even then the car would roll down the slightest incline. There's a lot of nonsense on the 'net about Fulvia handbrakes and how they never work. Funnily enough, in every contemporary road test I've read about Fulvias not once did the road tester day the handbrake didn't work...
I would have bet money there was something wrong inside the drum on my car but upon hiring a hub nut removal tool from Omicron [the club tool was out on loan] and having a look inside all seemed OK, just very , very tired. The shoes were also badly worn. I've never understood how handbrake shoes wear, in essence they're only acting as a set of wedges and it baffles me how they get worn. I suspect it might be a result of poor adjustment allowing he shoes to rub constantly.
Anyway , there was nothing outwardly untoward with the handbrake on my car but having gone to the trouble of removing the hub I decided to give the handbrake a thorough overhaul. Omicron do an excellent overhaul kit which includes all the weird springs and stuff found in the Lancia hub, not to mention service exchange brake shoes
It's not a difficult job to do but I would advise anybody tackling it to do one hub at a time so you've got a point of reference should you forget where everything goes. The trick is to overhaul the mechanism in the hub and then, leaving the caliper off so it doesn't confuse the issue by adding a bit of drag, wind the brake shoes on using the adjuster in the hub until the hub is locked on, then back off the adjuster three or four clicks until the drum spins freely. Repeat on the other hub and
then adjust the handbrake cable.
Before...
After , showing the shiney bits from Omicron
The handbrake now works perfectly and will even hold the car on my steep driveway , a feat which many modern cars won't perform.
If you've got handbrake issues on your Fulvia my advice is don't put up with it, there's nothing inherently wrong with them and they should work as well as a modern car.
Work on the Fulvia-Amphicar hybrid is progressing nicely