So we finally started the restoration of my 1949 Frazer 4 door sedan (or so we thought). We ordered our brake shoe parts off the Kaiser Parts Interchange & Sources List (NAPA TS53 - 47-55 KF standard) and picked them up. My brother came up to help and he pulled the covering after working with the cams and there were my brake shoes! The only problem was, the replacement shoes looked rather different and didn't have the oblong hole for the cam to come through, nor did it have the spring set-up which may be part of the "self-centering, self-adjusting" assembly. So back to NAPA we went with old and new shoes in hand. The clerk was able to find 1949 frazer parts in their computer and when he pulled up pictures of the four types of brake shoes (sedan, deluxe, manhatten and TAXI EDITION). The only set of shoes of the four designations that had the oblong cam holes was the Taxi Edition. So I ask, is it possible my 1949 Frazer was designed as a "Taxi?" Its serial number and identification tag identify it as: 1949 Frazer 495 Body 1; (retag designation F-505-015807). Or were taxi edition wheels put on 1949 Frazers? My Frazer by way of pictures looks just like the 1949 Frazer Manhattan because of its chrome, but none of its identifying numbers give it that designation, nor are there holes in the side for the customary script that the Manhatten carries. I am seeking info on the "taxi edition" of brake shoes or why my 1949 Frazer might have those type of shoes. Thank you for any insight you can share! Also, in case you have the same type of shoes - NAPA 2PG is the correct parts number for the taxi edition.