"Brake Best"…?
What you got (under a made-up nonbrand) is an old and inferior type of brake shoe hold-down spring and anchor. It'll work (assuming the springs are the ~correct ones), but not as well, and it doesn't do as good a job of keeping water out of the brakes, either.
Assuming your are working on a car with 9" drums, see
here for hardware kit info. Be prepared to learn that real parts cost a lot more than no-name crap…and prepared to understand how come as soon as you get the real parts and compare them to the rubbish.
Folks, our cars are
old. So old they statistically don't exist any more on the roads. We are long past the point where it stopped being reasonable to expect to be able to walk into a local parts store (let alone a chain parts store) and buy top-quality, or even good-quality parts for our cars. Here and there you get lucky on occasion, but mostly not; of those parts you can still get at such a store, an overwhelmingly large and growing proportion of them are garbage of one kind or another.
One of the realities of owning an old car is that it requires stashing/hoarding parts for when you'll need them. Unless you're lucky enough to live near someplace like
Old Car Parts Northwest, you have to plan ahead and go through the slower processes involved in finding and buying
good parts, then tuck them away so you have them when you eventually need them. The alternative is to put up with the poor operation and safety threat caused by part-shaped trinkets, usually from parts of the world where quality is regarded as a cute Western fetish and specifications are regarded as a fun kind of toilet paper. That is not something I'm willing to do, especially not with life-safety equipment (like brake parts).
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一期一会
Too many people who were born on third base actually believe they've hit a triple.
