This is theoretical, as it has been a while since I had a tandem.
I reckon properly set up modern rim brakes are good enough to stop a heavily loaded tandem reasonably quickly, as Dan has said the limiting factor is tyre adherence so care needed, especially in the wet or on gravel patches, diesel oil spills, etc.
The problem is heat dissipation on long hills, for which the ideal solution is IMO a drum brake that can be run hot without affecting the grease in the wheel bearings or (theoretically again) expansion of the hub shell affecting spoke tension. The latter could have been an issue with my Atom drum brake, but I never got it hot enough to find out.
The most suitable drum brake for this used to be the screw-on Arai, nowadays the closest alternative currently available that I know about is this Karasawa brake from SJS:
https://www.sjscycles.co.uk/brakes/karasawa-screw-on-tandem-drum-brake-replaces-arai/?geoc=FR Which will fit double-threaded derailleur type hubs (if these are still available, not searched) but not Rohloff. There is also something called the "Maddox drum brake", but I don't know if it is available or not.
It might be possible to fit this brake to a modified solo rear hub to use on the front, if the fork spacing is sufficient and, very important,
if the fork is strong enough. If this is possible, it should be better than a Sturmey-Archer drum brake for three reasons:
- it would allow the use of a hub with a stronger axle than the Sturmey-Archer front drum hub.
- it has a larger diameter, so should have more braking power. It is also quite heavy (850 g according to SJS) so it should absorb a reasonable amount of heat.
- because it screws onto the hub, heat transmission to the wheel bearings should be less.
I don't know the weight of the Arai hub, but with its cooling fins it was probably a bit better at heat dissipation than the Karasawa would be.
For control of a front drum brake I would prefer an additional lever on the same side of the handlebars as the lever for the front cantilever, maybe under the top of the drop handlebar. This would not allow simultaneous use of the two front brakes, but it would enable finer control. I don't think I would be comfortable with my ratchet thumbshifter solution for a front brake.
________________________________________________________________________________________________
Other possibilities:
1 Upgrade the rear disc brake to the 10 inch Santana, which is designed specifically for tandems. it appears to have cable control rather than hydraulics. This might mean modifying the rear triangle to fit a compatible brake mount, and probably getting an adapter made to fit the rotor to a Rohloff. And it probably wouldn't be quite as good as an Arai for heat dissipation.
2 Maybe try and get an adapter made to fit a Karasawa or Maddox drum brake to the Rohloff disc mountings. Santana seem to have one for normal disc mountings:
look for "Drum Brake Mount Convert disc flat plate to Arai or Maddox drum brake" in Google.
For a (very theoretical for me) tandem in 2022, personally I would prefer one of these two solutions to a front drum brake.