Is it worth replacing a lawn mower engine?
Replacing the engine on your Craftsman lawn tractor model 917272010 is worth it when the tractor’s deck, steering, and drivetrain are still solid and the total repair cost stays well below the cost of replacing the whole machine. If the tractor has widespread wear or multiple major issues, replacement usually makes more sense.
Quick decision checklist
- The mower deck is not rusted through, cracked, or badly bent
- The transmission drives smoothly and does not slip
- Steering and front axle components are tight (no severe play)
- You can still get common wear parts (belts, pulleys, switches)
- The engine swap cost is clearly less than buying a comparable tractor
- You plan to keep the tractor for several more seasons
Cost and condition guide
| What you’re seeing | Engine replacement makes sense when | Consider replacing the tractor when |
|---|---|---|
| Deck and frame | Deck is straight and structurally sound | Deck is rotted, cracked, or heavily patched |
| Drive and cut | Only the engine is the major failure | Engine plus transmission or deck system problems |
| Parts availability | Wear parts are easy to source | Multiple key parts are discontinued or hard to find |
| Total cost | Repair is well under half the cost of a comparable replacement | Repair cost approaches the cost of replacement |
Parts that often get addressed during an engine swap
Even with a new engine, we usually recommend checking these items so the tractor is reliable after the swap:
- PTO engagement and safety circuits (a failing switch can mimic engine problems); see switch.pto.3 582107601
- Starting circuit components (clicking, no-crank symptoms); see solenoid 532146154
- Deck drive wear items (noise, vibration, poor blade speed); see lawn tractor blade idler pulley 532139245 and husqvarna lawn tractor drive belt, 1/2 x 83-3/4 in 532139573
Why it matters
An engine replacement only pays off when it restores a tractor that is otherwise mechanically sound. If the deck, PTO system, or drivetrain is already near end-of-life, a new engine can leave you with more downtime and additional repair costs soon after.
Last updated: February 2026
What kind of engine does a Craftsman riding lawn mower have?
Craftsman riding mowers use gasoline engines, most commonly Briggs & Stratton or Kohler; the exact engine type on Craftsman model 917272010 is identified by the engine’s model/type code tag on the engine itself (not by the tractor model number alone).
What you’ll typically see on Craftsman riding mowers
Most Craftsman lawn tractors in this class use one of these engine layouts:
- Single-cylinder (one spark plug)
- V-twin (two spark plugs)
- Electric start with a 12-volt battery and starter solenoid
- Carbureted fuel system (air filter and fuel filter maintenance)
- Safety interlock system (seat, brake, and PTO circuits)
How to identify the exact engine on model 917272010
Check the engine first, then use that information when selecting tune-up parts or diagnosing starting issues:
- Find the engine ID label on the blower housing, valve cover, or near the starter
- Record the engine brand and the model/type/code (common on Briggs & Stratton)
- Count spark plugs to confirm single-cylinder vs V-twin
- Match the engine information to the correct maintenance parts (spark plug, air filter, fuel filter)
- If you’re troubleshooting a no-crank issue, verify the starting circuit components on the tractor
Starting system parts that commonly affect cranking
If the engine clicks but will not turn over, these tractor-side parts are frequent causes:
- Solenoid 532146154 (starter solenoid that switches battery power to the starter)
- Molded ignition key 532140403 (key that enables the ignition switch)
- Battery terminals and ground connection (clean, tight, corrosion-free)
- PTO switch and safety interlocks (PTO must be off; brake typically must be set)
Quick symptom guide
| Symptom | Most likely area | First checks |
|---|---|---|
| Rapid clicking | Battery/connection | Charge battery, clean terminals |
| Single click, no crank | Solenoid/starter circuit | Solenoid connections, battery voltage |
| Cranks but won’t start | Fuel/ignition | Fresh fuel, spark, air filter |
Why it matters
The engine make and model determine the correct tune-up parts and the right troubleshooting path; the tractor model number (917272010) identifies the chassis and wiring, while the engine tag identifies the engine itself.
For a step-by-step no-crank diagnosis, use our riding lawn mower engine clicks but doesnt turn over video.
Last updated: February 2026
What year was Craftsman 917272010 made?
Craftsman model 917272010 does not map to one single model year; this series was sold across multiple production runs. The exact build date is identified on the tractor’s product/serial number label (commonly under the seat or on the frame near the rear), which includes a date code or serial format tied to the manufacturing run.
How to find the exact year on your tractor
Check these common label locations on a Craftsman front-engine lawn tractor:
- Under the seat pan (lift the seat and look for a sticker or metal tag)
- On the frame rail near the rear wheels
- Near the engine compartment on the chassis
- Under the hood on the body panel (less common)
Once you find the label, record:
- Model number (should read 917272010)
- Serial number
- Any printed date or date code
What the model number tells you (and what it does not)
The 917 prefix is a Craftsman model numbering family used across many years. The remaining digits identify a specific configuration, but the same configuration can be produced in more than one year.
| Identifier | What it helps with | What it does not guarantee |
|---|---|---|
| Model number 917272010 | Correct parts lookup and diagrams | A single, exact year |
| Serial number/date code | Pinpoints production run timing | Deck size or engine brand by itself |
Why it matters
The build year affects parts variations such as steering components, deck drive parts, and electrical items. Using the serial/date code helps us match the correct replacement part the first time.
Parts that commonly vary by production run
If you are troubleshooting or replacing wear items, these are often production-sensitive:
- Pto switch 582107601 (engages the mower deck)
- Solenoid 532146154 (starter circuit)
- Molded ignition key 532140403 (starting and security fit)
- Husqvarna lawn tractor drive belt, 1/2 x 83-3/4 in 532139573 (deck drive)
For broader maintenance planning, we also recommend reviewing riding mower and tractor common questions.
Last updated: February 2026
Where can I find my lawn mower engine model number?
On a Craftsman lawn tractor model 917272010, the engine model number is typically stamped into the engine itself (not on the mower frame). Look for a metal-stamped code on the top of the engine near the cylinder head or valve cover area; it’s often on the right or left side depending on engine orientation.
Where to look on the engine
Check these common locations first (wipe dirt and oil off the area so the stamping is readable):
- Top of the engine near the cylinder head(s)
- Valve cover area on the right or left side
- Blower housing or shroud area near the top
- A label plate or sticker near the starter or flywheel cover
- Near the muffler mounting area (sometimes close to the heat shield)
What the engine model number looks like
Most riding mower engines use a model-type-code format (the exact format depends on the engine brand). When you find the stamping or label, record:
- Engine model number
- Type/spec number (if shown)
- Code/date number (if shown)
Quick reference table
| What you need | Where you’ll use it | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Engine model number | Engine parts lookup | Matches the correct carburetor, starter, ignition parts |
| Type/spec number | Confirms exact engine version | Prevents ordering the wrong variation |
| Code/date number | Identifies production run | Helps match updates and revisions |
Why it matters
The mower model number (917272010) identifies the tractor and deck parts, but the engine model number identifies engine-specific parts. Having both numbers speeds up troubleshooting and ensures the right replacement part the first time.
Related parts you might replace during engine work
If you’re diagnosing a no-start or click-no-crank issue, these model-related parts are commonly involved:
- Solenoid 532146154 (starter solenoid)
- Molded ignition key 532140403 (key and ignition system access)
- Switch.pto.3 582107601 (PTO safety and engagement circuit)
Last updated: February 2026





