The hand brake had neen exceptionlally good over the seven years we have owned the car. However, in recent times it had become less and less effective on an incline and had to be pulled on harder. This to me hinted that an adjustment would be needed to restore the otherwise good performance.
Brakes should need very little or no adjustment - the brake calipers should self adjust as the pads wear - If in recent times it has become less effective then it suggests that the brakes need attention eg new pads / disks or seized calipers (pistons or whole caliper can't move)
Strip down the rear brakes to check and sort. If you are not sure what to do then find an independant garage who does - brakes are life critical!
Couple of "should" s above save it from being a work of fiction.
Automatic adjusters on older cars frequently don't work. I don't think they've ever worked on any car I've ever bought.
When they don't work manual adjustment is required, which is much more difficult with an automatic adjuster than with a manual one.
(Manual brake adjusters are my idea of automotive luxury, last experienced on a Lada Mk1 saloon many years ago. Can't afford it now.)
You will probably have to do the mechanical equivalent of keyhole surgery through the drum (I'm assuming this car isn't discs on the back) backplate in order to back off the shoes enough to get the drums off. If there's a wear lip you might have to hit them a lot too.
Once you get the drums off and clean everything off and lubricate it (and maybe grind off the wear lip) the automatic adjusters might start to work, but I wouldn't bet on it. If they dont you'll just have to repeat the manual procedure every now and then. It should get easier.
This is all finicky and a bit of a pain, which tends to mean that you can't trust anyone else to do it properly for you.
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