What tiller is made in the USA?
Some tillers are made in the USA; for example, Mantis tillers are designed, engineered, and manufactured in the United States. For your Craftsman front-tine tiller model 917299011, country of origin varies by product line and production run, so we use the 917299011 owner's manual to confirm the correct operating and maintenance details for your specific unit.
How to identify where a tiller was made
Check these locations on the tiller and compare what you find to your records:
- The product ID or rating label on the frame (often near the engine or handle mount)
- The engine label (engine model and serial number plate)
- The carton label (if you still have the packaging)
- The owner documentation that shipped with the unit
- The parts diagrams and key numbers used for service parts
What “made in the USA” can mean
Manufacturers use different origin statements. Here is how they typically differ:
| Label wording | What it usually indicates | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| Made in USA | Final assembly and substantial manufacturing in the U.S. | Confirm on the product label |
| Assembled in USA | Final assembly in the U.S.; parts may be global | Check label details |
| Designed/engineered in USA | Design work in the U.S.; manufacturing may be elsewhere | Use label for true origin |
Why it matters
Country of origin does not change the correct service parts for 917299011, but it can affect what you see on labels and how the brand markets the product. For repairs and maintenance, the most important match points are your model number, engine model, and the exact part ID.
Last updated: February 2026
Where to find model number on CRAFTSMAN Rear tine tiller?
The model number is on the product identification label (data plate) attached to the tiller. For Craftsman model 917299011 (a front-tine tiller), use the label on the machine to confirm the exact model before ordering parts; the 917299011 owner's manual also shows the model format as 917.299011.
Where to check on the tiller
Look for a sticker or metal tag in these common, easy-to-see areas:
- Handle support or handle column near the controls
- Frame rail near the engine mounting area
- Tine shield or tine guard area (wipe dirt off to see the label)
- Near the recoil starter housing or engine shroud
- On the transmission housing area
What you are looking for
Craftsman tiller model numbers are typically 9 digits. In print, you may see a dot in the middle.
| Where it appears | Example | What to write down |
|---|---|---|
| Product ID label on the tiller | 917299011 | Model number (and serial, if listed) |
| Manual cover and parts lists | 917.299011 | Confirms the same model with dot formatting |
Why it matters
The model number is the fastest way to match the correct parts diagrams and components (tines, belts, engine service parts). A single digit difference can route you to a different Craftsman tiller build.
Last updated: February 2026
Which is better, front tine or rear tine tiller?
For most homeowners, a rear-tine tiller is better for breaking new ground and working hard soil, while a front-tine tiller (like Craftsman model 917299011) is better for maintaining an existing garden bed, cultivating, and lighter tilling. The best choice depends on soil hardness, garden size, and how deep you need to till.
Quick comparison: front tine vs rear tine
| Feature | Front-tine tiller (Craftsman 917299011 type) | Rear-tine tiller |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Existing beds, weeding, mixing compost | New gardens, hard soil, larger areas |
| Handling | More manual effort; can bounce in hard soil | More stable; typically self-propelled |
| Depth control | Depth stake and tine setup help manage bite | Usually stronger depth control and traction |
| Cost and weight | Typically lighter and less expensive | Typically heavier and more expensive |
How to decide (what we recommend)
- Choose a front-tine tiller if you maintain a garden each season, want a lighter machine, and mainly cultivate or loosen already-worked soil.
- Choose a rear-tine tiller if you are cutting into sod, clay, or compacted ground, or you need to cover a larger plot with less physical effort.
- If your soil is often dry and hard, plan on shallower first passes; hard soil increases bounce and makes any tiller harder to control.
- If you need flexibility, look for a unit that lets you adjust tilling width and handle height for comfort and control.
Getting the best results with a front-tine tiller (917299011)
Your Craftsman 917299011 is designed with adjustments that help match the machine to the job.
- Set the depth stake for shallow tilling on the first pass in hard soil, then increase depth gradually.
- Adjust handle height so you can keep steady control as the tines pull forward.
- Use the correct tine arrangement for your conditions (cultivating vs wider tilling).
- Avoid tilling when soil is extremely wet; it can clump and reduce performance.
Helpful how-to: 917299011 owner's manual
Why it matters
Choosing the right tine style saves time and wear on key components like the tine assemblies, transmission drive parts, and depth stake hardware. A front-tine tiller excels at routine garden maintenance; a rear-tine tiller is the better tool for heavy ground-breaking.
Last updated: February 2026
Who builds Craftsman tillers?
Many Craftsman tillers are built by an outside OEM (original equipment manufacturer) and sold under the Craftsman brand. For Craftsman tiller model 917299011, the 917 prefix is widely used on Craftsman outdoor power equipment that aligns with AYP (American Yard Products) and Husqvarna-family manufacturing; the most reliable way to confirm your exact unit is the model tag and the parts listings in the 917299011 owner's manual.
How to confirm the builder for your specific tiller
Use these checks on your 917299011 to identify the OEM and match parts correctly:
- Verify the full model number on the product ID tag: 917299011
- Compare assemblies and part callouts in the 917299011 owner's manual to your machine
- Check the engine label separately; the engine manufacturer can differ from the tiller OEM
- Match parts by diagram location (handles, tine shaft, wheel and depth stake) rather than by brand name alone
What “who built it” changes for parts and service
The OEM matters most for chassis and drive components; engine service parts follow the engine model.
| What you are repairing | What to match | Example for this model |
|---|---|---|
| Tines, depth stake, wheels | Tiller model 917299011 diagrams | Inner tine assembly 584971502, depth stake 532446066 |
| Pins, clips, retainers | Exact part ID and location | Tiller clevis pin 532443676, retainer ring 812000028 |
| Starting system | Tiller model parts list | Tiller recoil starter 532420603 |
Why it matters
Craftsman is the brand on the decal, but the OEM determines the frame, transmission layout, belt routing, and hardware sizing. Confirming the model and using model-matched diagrams prevents ordering the wrong tine assemblies, pins, or drive parts.
Last updated: February 2026



