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Craftsman 750256050 tractor Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Craftsman 750256050 tractor, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

Craftsman 750256050 tractor
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Browse Parts for 750256050 Riding Mowers & Tractors

  • Lawn Tractor Washer for Craftsman 750256050 - Part M122113

    Mower deck 46" (1.17m) diagram

    Lawn Tractor Washer

    Part #M122113

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Ring Kit for Craftsman 750256050 - Part AM122527

    Transaxle shafts and gears diagram

    Ring Kit

    Part #AM122527

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Washer for Craftsman 750256050 - Part M120271

    Transaxle shafts and gears diagram

    Washer

    Part #M120271

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Kit for Craftsman 750256050 - Part AM119879

    Transaxle shafts and gears diagram

    Kit

    Part #AM119879

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Bulb for Craftsman 750256050 - Part AM106153

    Bulb

    Part #AM106153

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Bolt for Craftsman 750256050 - Part 03M7183

    Mower deck 46" (1.17m) diagram

    Bolt

    Part #03M7183

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Washer for Craftsman 750256050 - Part 24M7051

    Console, tank, steering lever diagram

    Washer

    Part #24M7051

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Label for Craftsman 750256050 - Part M126500

    Console, tank, steering lever diagram

    Label

    Part #M126500

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Lawn Tractor Flange Nut for Craftsman 750256050 - Part 14M7298

    Lawn Tractor Flange Nut

    Part #14M7298

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Rod for Craftsman 750256050 - Part M124640

    Mower deck 46" (1.17m) diagram

    Rod

    Part #M124640

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

Craftsman Tractor 750256050 FAQs

Craftsman model 750256050 is a specific front-engine lawn tractor identifier, and the most reliable way to determine its exact build year is to use the tractor’s serial number and date code on the ID tag (not the LT1000 series name). Once you read that tag, you can match it to the manufacturing date for your unit.

How to find the year on the tractor

Look for the model and serial number label in one of these common spots:

  • Under the seat pan or on the seat bracket
  • On the rear fender well (inside edge)
  • On the frame rail near the engine
  • Near the battery tray
  • Under the hood area on the chassis

Write down:

  • Model number: 750256050
  • Full serial number (all digits and letters)

How to decode the build date (what to look for)

Many riding mowers and lawn tractors use a serial number format that includes a date segment (often the first 6 digits) that represents the month, day, and year of manufacture.

  • If the serial begins with 6 digits, try reading it as MMDDYY
  • If it begins with 8 digits, it is often YYYYMMDD
  • If letters are included, the date may be embedded; record the entire serial exactly as shown

Quick examples (format only)

Serial/date pattern Example What it means
MMDDYY 041506 April 15, 2006
YYYYMMDD 20060415 April 15, 2006

Why it matters

The build year affects parts matching for common wear items like the deck belt, blades, spindle assemblies, battery, starter solenoid, and ignition switch. Two tractors that look identical can use different parts depending on the production run.

Helpful DIY reference

If you are troubleshooting a no-start or slow-crank issue while you are checking the ID tag, use our guide: riding lawn mower engine clicks but doesnt turn over video.

Last updated: February 2026

Craftsman riding mowers and lawn tractors (including model 750256050) are commonly equipped with engines supplied by major small-engine manufacturers such as Briggs & Stratton, Kohler, and sometimes Kawasaki. The exact engine brand on your tractor depends on the specific build and engine model installed.

What you’ll typically see on Craftsman tractors

  • Briggs & Stratton: very common on many Craftsman lawn tractors
  • Kohler: common on mid to higher output tractor engines
  • Kawasaki: used on some higher-end configurations
  • Other suppliers: may appear depending on production year and configuration

How to identify the engine brand on your 750256050

Check the engine itself, not the hood decal. Use these quick checks:

  • Look for the engine data plate (usually on the blower housing, valve cover area, or near the starter)
  • Record the engine brand, model, type, and code/spec numbers
  • Match those numbers when buying tune-up items (air filter, oil filter, spark plug, fuel filter)
  • If the label is dirty, wipe it clean and use a flashlight to read stamped characters

Where the engine brand matters (and where it doesn’t)

Task Engine brand matters? Why
Buying filters and spark plug Yes Parts are engine-model specific
Carburetor or starter replacement Yes Mounting and specs vary by engine
Deck blades and belts No Those are tractor and deck specific

Why it matters

Craftsman is the tractor brand, but the engine is a separate system with its own model ID. Using the engine’s model and spec/code prevents wrong-part fit issues and helps you troubleshoot starting, clicking, or no-crank problems faster.

Helpful DIY resources

Last updated: February 2026

Common problems on a Craftsman riding mower like model 750256050 usually fall into a few buckets: no-start or slow-crank (battery, cables, solenoid, starter), runs-then-stalls (fuel delivery, carburetor, air filter), and cutting or drive issues (PTO, belts, deck leveling, tire pressure). Use a simple symptom-based check to narrow it down fast.

Most common symptoms and likely causes

  • Engine clicks but won’t crank: weak battery, corroded terminals, bad starter solenoid, seized starter
  • Engine cranks but won’t start: stale fuel, clogged fuel filter, dirty carburetor, fouled spark plug, safety switch not made
  • Starts then dies: clogged carburetor jet, plugged fuel cap vent, dirty air filter, water in fuel
  • Blades won’t engage or cut is uneven: worn deck belt, damaged idler pulley, PTO switch/clutch issue, deck out of level
  • Won’t move or loses drive: worn drive belt, misadjusted linkage, low hydrostatic fluid (if equipped), stuck brake

Quick checks we recommend first (10 minutes)

  • Verify the PTO/blade switch is OFF and the brake pedal is fully depressed (safety interlocks).
  • Check battery connections for tight, clean, shiny metal contact.
  • Confirm fresh fuel; if it smells sour or is months old, drain and refill.
  • Inspect belts for cracks, glazing, or slack.
  • Check tire pressure side-to-side; uneven pressure can mimic a deck problem.

Troubleshooting map (symptom to next step)

What you see What to check next Typical fix
Clicks only Battery voltage, terminals, solenoid Charge/replace battery; clean cables
Cranks, no start Spark plug, fuel flow, air filter Plug service; fuel system cleaning
Dies when brake released Safety switch circuit, brake switch Adjust/replace switch; linkage check
Uneven cut Deck level, blade condition, tire pressure Level deck; sharpen/replace blades

Why it matters

Most “big” failures on riding mowers start as small maintenance issues. Catching a weak battery, dirty air filter, or worn belt early prevents no-start days and reduces strain on the starter, PTO, and engine.

Helpful DIY guides for the most common issues

Last updated: February 2026

Most common symptoms to help you fix your riding mowers & tractors

Choose a symptom to see related riding mower and lawn tractor repairs.

Main causes: damaged tie rods, bent or worn wheel spindle, worn front axle, damaged sector gear assembly…

Main causes: dead battery, stale fuel, bad starter solenoid, ignition system problem, bad ignition interlock switch, clo…

Main causes: worn or broken blade belt, broken belt idler pulley, blade clutch cable failure, bad PTO switch, damaged ma…

Main causes: engine overfilled with oil, leaky head gasket or sump gasket, damaged carburetor seals, cracked fuel pump, …

Main causes: punctured tire or inner tube, leaky valve stem, damaged wheel rim…

Main causes: unlevel mower deck, dull or damaged cutting blades, worn mandrel pulleys, bent mower deck, engine needs tun…

Main causes: worn or broken ground drive belt, bad seat switch, transaxle freewheel control engaged, transaxle failure, …

Main causes: faulty battery, bad alternator…

Main causes: shift lever needs adjustment, neutral control needs adjustment…

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Repair time and Difficulty

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