Another way to check your Handbrake, and make sure it is tight enough is;
Park the car, in an open parking lot area so you are allowed some room to move your car...
Pull the Handbrake lever your "3 clicks" or whatever you use to set it thru tension on your hand from it.
Start the car,
Keeping the Handbrake on - can you move the car? No? Good then it means the "BRAKE" system is looking at your Handbrake (Emergency) Brake and keeping the transmission from getting damaged by dragging brakes - ok, that part of a "test" passes.
- IF it moves, then apply more clicks - how many more? You might want to have the transmission system checked to make sure the release solenoids are working right and correctly - you should NOT move -
- the BRAKE light is telling the PCM/TCM not to move the car...
- but release the brake and reapply the handbrake - attempt to - for 3 clicks does the car come to a stop? It should - the transmission would see "BRAKE" light on the dash and cut out that transmission so no damage there. Again, that test would pass.
In the above test, you're verifying the BRAKE and PCM are talking to each other - BRAKE overrides any PCM control - or should - to keep the car from rolling after or from being stopped - unless you're in control and want the vehicle to move.
Another one though - is dealing with CENTERING of your brake shoes to drum clearance...
The Handbrake uses a lever on one shoe - to lift/pivot the shoe towards the drum- making contact - the rebound effect then goes thru that adjuster screw / bolt into the other shoe - forcing it to move towards the drum - both should meet the drum about the same time - the first shoe (rear one usually) contacts but then transfers force to the bolt thru to the other shoe and make it pivot to the drum.
- The Handbrake manual system needs to have that adjuster bolt set to a proper length so the energy from your hand braking - is being transferred to both shoes equally enough - but that bolt also is there to help with wear, as the shoes wear - get thinner, the distance to the drum is greater, requires more distance to move to apply to stop - so the adjuster bolt does this thru a rocking action, that turns that bolt to EXTEND itself a little or retract - until it reaches a serrated notch which then stops the retraction - instead it helps "center" your shoes to the drum so they are spaced evenly - every time you apply brakes Hand or Power from your Brake Pedal.
- This process repeats every time you apply your brakes - for the lifetime of the vehicle. OR at least it should - until they wear out.
If you're ok with this so far, there is one other aspect that you need to consider when it comes to knowing if you have enough clicks or not...
The Rear Brake Wheel Cylinder, the one that is bolted to the plate - when you apply your brakes; fluid flows into that cylinder, and pries apart the shoes from it's own piston pushing the shoe to the drum - forcing shoe to drum pressure to stop your car.
When the Wheel cylinder is applied, BOTH shoes move immediately. Part #'s 7 and 8
The Handbrake moves one shoe to move another thru a bolt (your adjuster) - if they are NOT CENTERED - then it would take more clicks to "center" the shoes to the drum so BOTH shoes can stop the car. You only engage one, that shoe will wear unevenly compared to the other. The shoe connected to the Handbrake wears thinner, and if you don't have the adjuster bolt set correctly - one shoe, the handbrake one, will make braking uneven and the Wheel cylinder to Handbrake aspect (your CENTERING of Shoe to Drum for both sides) is different because one shoe is thinner than the other.
To fix that - it's pretty simple - park your car, leave the engine running - press your foot on the brake pedal firmly - then set your handbrake - but keep pulling the handbrake a little harder than usual - to "tension" it - force the shoe to the drum and see if the other shoe will follow and apply itself to the other side of the drum - the handbrake - if the shoes are slightly off center, that handbrake will click up more to take up the tension as the adjuster bolt then helps to "center" the shoes.
Why this happens? As brakes age, their ability to seat against the plate and also stay put on the plate - requires the adjuster, retraction springs and the pressure points the brakes shoes rest on - ALL need some form of lubrication to provide for this centering movement. IF not checked or examined - your fail an MOT test because the shoes are not keeping in-line and centered - so the Handbrake test fails.