What model number is the Craftsman 917370534?
The model number is 917.370534 (commonly written without the dot as 917370534) for this Craftsman walk-behind gas lawn mower. You’ll see it printed on the mower’s model tag and on the cover page and parts lists in the 917370534 owner's manual.
Where to find the model number on the mower
We recommend checking the mower’s model tag first, then confirming it in the manual.
- Look on the mower’s rear housing/deck area near the discharge door or rear bagger opening.
- Check the handle support area (near where the handle bolts to the deck).
- Compare the tag to the manual listing for Craftsman ROTARY LAWN MOWER Model No. 917.370534.
- If the tag is dirty or faded, wipe it clean and take a photo for reference.
Why the dot matters (917.370534 vs 917370534)
Both formats refer to the same mower; the dot is a formatting style used in many Craftsman manuals.
| You might see it as | What it means | When it’s used |
|---|---|---|
| 917.370534 | Same model number | Often in printed manuals and diagrams |
| 917370534 | Same model number | Often on parts sites and search fields |
Why it matters when ordering parts
Using the exact model number helps us match the correct blade, drive system, and hardware for your mower.
- Ensures the correct 21-inch blade fitment and blade mounting parts
- Helps match drive components like the ground drive belt and transmission parts
- Prevents ordering look-alike hardware (nuts, bolts, washers) that do not match thread size
Example of a model-matched part
If you’re servicing the cutting system, a common model-matched item is the lawn mower blade 532406712.
Last updated: January 2026
How old is my mower by serial number?
For Craftsman walk-behind mower model 917370534, the serial number is the best starting point for estimating age because it ties back to the mower’s production run and your purchase record. We recommend using the serial number decal location shown in the 917370534 owner's manual and comparing it to your proof of purchase for the most accurate “age in years.”
Where to find the serial number on this model
The model and serial number are typically printed on a decal on the rear of the lawn mower housing.
- Look on the rear of the mower deck (housing), not on the handle
- Clean the area so the decal text is readable
- Write down both the model number (917370534) and the full serial number
- Record the date of purchase if you still have a receipt
How to estimate the mower’s age from the serial number
Serial numbers on outdoor power equipment often include a date code, but the exact format varies by manufacturer and production year. Use this process:
- Check the first 4 to 6 characters for a date-style pattern (common examples: YYMM, MMYY, or MMDDYY)
- If the serial includes letters, look for a block of 4 to 6 digits that could represent a build date
- Compare the suspected build date to the purchase date; purchase is usually after manufacture
- If the serial does not clearly show a date code, use the purchase date as the “in service” start
Quick reference: what you can confirm
| What you have | What it tells you | Best use |
|---|---|---|
| Serial number | Manufacturing identifier (sometimes includes date code) | Estimate build timeframe |
| Date of purchase | When the mower likely went into service | Best “age you’ve owned it” |
| Model number 917370534 | Parts and manual match | Ensures correct parts lookup |
Why it matters
Knowing the approximate age helps us match the right parts (blade, drive belt, transmission components) and plan maintenance like blade sharpening, oil changes, and drive system checks.
Related DIY help
If you’re working on maintenance while you’re checking the serial decal, use how to winterize a lawn mower for seasonal storage steps.
Last updated: January 2026
Is it cheaper to repair or replace a lawn mower?
For a Craftsman walk-behind mower like model 917370534, it’s usually cheaper to repair when the problem is a normal wear item (blade, belt, air filter, spark plug). It’s usually smarter to replace when a major, high-cost failure happens (engine or drive system) and the repair approaches about half the cost of a comparable new mower.
Quick decision checklist
- Repair if the mower starts and runs well, but cuts poorly (dull/bent blade, clogged deck).
- Repair if the self-propel is weak but the mower still runs (often belt, drive wheels, or debris buildup).
- Repair if it needs routine maintenance (spark plug, air filter, blade sharpening).
- Replace if the engine has severe internal damage (low compression, heavy smoke, metal noise).
- Replace if the drive system needs multiple major parts at once (transmission plus other drive components).
- Replace if the deck is badly rusted/cracked or the handle structure is unsafe.
What the manual tells us about “repairable” items
The 917370534 documentation treats several parts as normal wear items (for example blades, blade adapters, belts, air cleaners, and spark plugs). That’s a strong sign these are typically cost-effective repairs rather than “replace the mower” situations. Use the 917370534 owner's manual to match the symptom to the maintenance or troubleshooting steps.
Common repair costs vs replacement (typical)
| Issue type | Typical fix | Usually cheaper option |
|---|---|---|
| Routine wear | Blade service, air filter, spark plug | Repair |
| Drive performance | Clean drive wheels, replace belt | Repair |
| Major mechanical | Engine or transmission replacement | Replace (often) |
Model-specific repair examples (parts that commonly make sense)
- If the blade is bent or damaged, replacing it is a straightforward repair; use an approved blade such as the lawn mower blade 532406712 when it matches your configuration.
- If the mower will not drive properly, a worn belt is a common cause; the lawn mower ground drive belt 580364604 is one of the drive items used on this model.
- If the rear wheels do not turn freely, the manual notes debris can pack into the drive wheel and dust cover area; cleaning or replacing a worn dust cover like the lawn mower wheel dust cover 581840401 can restore movement.
Why it matters
Repairing wear items keeps your mower cutting safely and efficiently, and it protects bigger components (like the drive system). Replacing the mower makes more sense when the repair is expensive, involves multiple major assemblies, or the deck/engine condition makes reliability unlikely.
Last updated: January 2026





