That's a generic image, I think. Mine don't QUITE look like that. (And the car isn't worth the cost of a pair of them at that price anyway)!
I had (I think) a SAAB and then later Granada with that sort of arrangement and I grew to hate the system. The main design issue seemed to be where the handbrake lever arm, entered the caliper - The seals perished and the rotating arm would rust and seize. It was an annual pre-MOT job, to lubricate and free up those arms.
On cars generally, how far up the actual cabin lever comes up (number of clicks) can greatly affect the amount of effort you can apply to braking the wheels. The fewer the clicks, the more leverage you can apply with your left arm. My present car has combined disk and drum at the rear - It's handbrake is superb and reliable at two clicks. It wasn't always thus - I bought it with it at 7 clicks and barely passing the MOT.
The handbrake drums would develop rust on the internal surface, through lack of use of the handbrake when in motion and as the system then became so ineffective, much more than normal effort was needed to apply the handbrake - that would result in the weak design of compensator stretching and even more clicks needed, until they ran out of adjustment.
The simple fix I arrived at was to reinforce the compensator, so it could no longer stretch, adjust the system to two clicks and use the bl**dy handbrake regularly, to prevent the drum internal surface rusting.