Can you still get Briggs and Stratton parts?
Yes. We still carry replacement parts for your Briggs 350777-1034-E1 lawn and garden engine, including common maintenance items and ignition parts. Use the parts list for model 350777-1034-E1 to match the exact part to your engine’s specification and repair.
Parts you can still buy for model 350777-1034-E1
These are some of the most commonly replaced parts we show for this engine:
- Briggs & statton fuel filter 84001895 (inline fuel filter)
- Briggs & statton magneto 591459 (ignition coil/magneto)
- Briggs & statton lawn & garden equipment engine starter motor 795121 (electric start motor)
- Briggs & statton oil filter 492932S (spin-on oil filter)
- Briggs & statton woodruff key 691639 (flywheel key)
How to make sure you’re ordering the right part
Briggs engines often have multiple “type” or “trim” variations under the same family, so matching by model and spec is what prevents wrong-part returns.
- Confirm the engine model is 350777-1034-E1 on the engine shroud or valve cover label
- Compare the part’s description to what you’re replacing (fuel system, ignition, starting, charging)
- If the engine won’t start, check fuel delivery and spark before ordering multiple parts
- For electrical issues, test components before replacing them
- When in doubt, replace maintenance items first (fuel filter, oil filter) and re-test
Quick guide: symptom to likely part area
| Symptom | Most likely system | Example part on this page |
|---|---|---|
| Cranks but won’t start | Fuel or ignition | Fuel filter, magneto |
| No crank (electric start) | Starting circuit | Starter motor |
| Weak or no spark | Ignition | Magneto |
| Oil leaks at service point | Drain/service hardware | Oil drain plug |
Why it matters
Using the correct OEM-style part for your Briggs 350777-1034-E1 helps restore reliable starting, steady fuel flow, and proper ignition timing. It also reduces repeat failures caused by mismatched fittings or incorrect electrical output.
Last updated: February 2026
How to find Briggs & Stratton engine parts?
For your Briggs lawn and garden engine model 350777-1034-E1, the fastest way to find the right replacement parts is to match the engine model number to the parts list, then confirm the exact part by name and diagram location before ordering.
Step-by-step: find the correct part for your engine
- Confirm the engine model number is 350777-1034-E1 (use the full model, including the suffix).
- Identify the system you are repairing (fuel, ignition, starting, charging, lubrication).
- Use the parts list for this model to locate the part by diagram callout and description.
- Match the part description to what is on your engine (shape, mounting points, wire connectors, hose size).
- Order the exact replacement part for your repair, such as the Briggs & statton fuel filter 84001895 or Briggs & statton magneto 591459.
Common parts people look up first
These are frequent starting points when an engine will not start, runs rough, or stalls:
| Symptom | Most common part area | Example part on this model page |
|---|---|---|
| Hard starting or no start | Ignition | Magneto |
| Starts then dies, surges | Fuel delivery | Inline fuel filter |
| Slow crank or no crank | Starting system | Starter motor |
| Low oil flow or dirty oil | Lubrication | Oil filter |
Why it matters
Briggs engines often have multiple versions that look similar, and small differences in model suffix can change the correct carburetor, ignition, or gasket. Matching parts to 350777-1034-E1 helps you avoid fit issues, repeat repairs, and return delays.
Helpful tip for ordering
When you are ready to buy, we recommend ordering by the exact part listing for your model so you get the correct fit and connector style. If you are unsure which part matches your symptom, start with the most likely system (fuel or ignition) and verify the part name and ID before checkout.
Last updated: February 2026
What are common Briggs & Stratton problems?
Common problems on a Briggs 350777-1034-E1 lawn and garden engine are no-start or hard-start, rough running/surging, stalling under load, and overheating. In most cases, the root cause is fuel delivery (stale fuel, clogged filter/carburetor), ignition (weak spark), or basic maintenance (dirty oil, restricted airflow).
Most common symptoms and likely causes
- Won’t start / hard to start: stale fuel, clogged fuel filter, fouled spark plug, weak ignition coil (magneto)
- Starts then dies: restricted fuel flow, carburetor varnish, debris in fuel bowl
- Surging or hunting at idle: partially clogged carburetor circuits, air leak, fuel restriction
- No spark: failed magneto, damaged plug boot, poor kill-wire connection
- Overheats / loses power: low oil, dirty oil filter, cooling fins packed with debris, running too lean
Quick checks we recommend (fast, high-impact)
- Drain old fuel and refill with fresh fuel.
- Replace the inline fuel filter if flow looks weak or fuel is dark: Briggs & statton fuel filter 84001895.
- Verify spark and ignition condition; if spark is intermittent or absent, inspect/replace the ignition module: Briggs & statton magneto 591459.
- Change oil and the oil filter on schedule: Briggs & statton oil filter 492932S.
- If it still surges or only runs on choke, the carburetor is the usual fix point: Briggs & statton carburetor 847395.
Troubleshooting guide by symptom
| Symptom | What to check first | Common fix |
|---|---|---|
| No start | Fuel freshness, spark | Fuel filter, spark plug, magneto |
| Surging | Fuel restriction | Carburetor cleaning or replacement |
| Stalls under load | Fuel flow, ignition strength | Fuel filter, magneto |
| Overheating | Oil level, debris on cooling fins | Oil service, clean shrouds/fins |
Why it matters
Small-engine problems usually cascade. A restricted fuel filter can make the engine run lean, which raises operating temperature and can shorten the life of internal parts. Keeping fuel, ignition, and oil service current prevents most repeat failures.
Last updated: February 2026

