How to tell if a snowblower auger belt is bad?
On our Craftsman C950-52340-3 dual-stage snow blower, a bad auger belt shows up as weak or no snow throwing even though the engine runs normally; you may also notice squealing, a burning rubber smell, or the auger stopping under load because the belt is slipping or stretched.
- Auger does not turn when you squeeze the auger control lever
- Snow throws weakly or only in light snow, then fades in heavier snow
- Squealing or chirping when the auger is engaged (belt slip)
- Burning rubber smell after engaging the auger
- Auger starts, then stops as soon as it hits packed snow
- Belt looks shiny (glazed), cracked, frayed, or has missing chunks
- Shut the engine off and remove the key (if equipped); wait for all moving parts to stop.
- Remove the belt cover and look for:
- Cracks/fraying along the ribs or edges
- Glazing (shiny, hardened belt surface)
- Rubber dust inside the cover (sign of slipping)
- Slack when the auger is engaged (stretched belt)
- Check the pulleys and idler area for packed snow, rust, or wobble; a good belt still slips if a pulley is damaged or misaligned.
| What you notice | Most likely cause | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| Auger never turns | Broken belt or linkage issue | Inspect belt and engagement linkage; replace worn parts |
| Auger turns but stops in heavy snow | Stretched belt or weak idler tension | Inspect belt for glazing/stretch; check idler spring/tension |
| Loud squeal when engaging auger | Belt slipping on pulley | Clean debris, inspect pulleys, replace glazed belt |
| Burning smell | Severe slip or belt dragging | Stop use, inspect belt and pulley alignment |
A slipping auger belt reduces throwing distance and can overheat, leaving you with no auger drive mid-storm. Catching wear early also helps protect pulleys, idlers, and bearings from extra heat and vibration.
For the Craftsman C950-52340-3, match parts by the full model number to avoid wrong belt length or profile. You can order replacement parts from the parts list for this model, or search by model number on Sears PartsDirect. If you are working on the electric start system while troubleshooting engagement, we also list items like the screw 33329H for compatible assemblies.
Last updated: February 2026
How to tell year of Craftsman snowblower by serial number?
For Craftsman dual-stage snow blower model C950-52340-3, the build year is encoded in the serial number, but the decoding format depends on the manufacturer that produced the unit. We decode the “year-in-decade” character (or an embedded date code), then confirm by matching the correct parts breakdown.
Check common tag locations:
- Rear frame near the handles
- Side of the auger housing
- Near the engine mounting area
- Under a shroud or cover (if equipped)
Craftsman used multiple serial formats; these are the most common.
| Serial number style | What to look for | What it tells you |
|---|---|---|
| Position-based code (letters/numbers in fixed positions) | A specific character represents the year | Year within a decade (example: “1” = a year ending in 1) |
| MTD-style date code | Early characters include month, day, year | Month letter (A = Jan … L = Dec), then day digits, then year-in-decade |
Use the character that represents the year-in-decade, then determine the decade by comparing your machine’s design and the parts used on C950-52340-3.
If the serial begins with a month letter followed by day digits and a year digit, you can read it as a manufacture date (month, day, year-in-decade).
Use your decoded year to verify you are looking at the correct configuration:
- Chute control style and linkage routing
- Drive system type (friction disc vs. other)
- Auger/impeller setup and belt routing
- Electric start components and wiring layout
If you are working around the starter area, a fastener match like the screw 33329H can help confirm you are in the right parts breakdown.
Snowblower parts can change by production run; the correct year helps ensure the auger drive, traction drive, and electric start parts fit properly.
To search additional parts by model number, use Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026
What is the most common reason snowblower won't start?
The most common reason a Craftsman C950-52340-3 dual-stage snow blower will not start is fuel-related: old gas turns to varnish and gums up the carburetor so the engine cannot get the right fuel mix. A fouled spark plug is the next most common cause.
- Confirm the fuel is fresh (drain old fuel and refill with fresh gasoline).
- Turn the fuel valve ON (if equipped) and make sure the choke is set for a cold start.
- Check the spark plug wire is fully seated and the plug is not wet or heavily carboned.
- Verify the safety key is fully inserted and any operator presence controls are engaged.
- If it has electric start, confirm the outlet and cord are good and the starter engages.
| Symptom | Most likely cause | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| Starts then dies | Partially clogged carburetor, restricted fuel flow | Drain fuel, clean carburetor bowl/jet, check fuel line and shutoff |
| No start, plug is dry | Fuel not reaching cylinder | Prime correctly, check for clogged carburetor passages |
| No start, plug is wet | Flooded engine | Open choke, pull starter several times, dry/replace plug |
| Weak or no spark | Bad plug or ignition issue | Replace plug first; then inspect ignition wiring and kill switch circuit |
A snowblower engine needs fuel, spark, and compression at the right time. Old fuel most often breaks that chain by blocking tiny carburetor passages, especially after storage; fixing the fuel system usually restores reliable starting.
If you are ordering parts for your C950-52340-3, match by full model number and diagram callouts. This model’s parts list includes items such as the screw 33329H (part number 6218) for the Tecumseh electric starter assembly. For broader model-based searching and ordering, use Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026





