How do I tell what year my MTD snowblower is?
To tell what year your MTD snowblower was built, we use the serial number on the machine, not the model number. On many MTD units (including model 31AH65FH700), the serial number format encodes the build date; the most reliable method is to match your serial number pattern to the decoding chart in the 31AH65FH700 owner's manual.
Where to find the serial number
Look for a label or stamped tag on the snow thrower:
- On the frame near the engine or recoil starter area
- On the rear of the housing near the handles
- Near the axle area or side panel
- Sometimes on an engine label (engine serial is different from the unit serial)
How to decode the year (practical approach)
MTD has used more than one serial-number format over the years, so we decode it by pattern.
- Write down the full serial number exactly as shown (letters and numbers)
- Count the characters (common formats are 11 characters, but other lengths exist)
- If your serial number includes a clear date-style sequence, use that to identify the build date
- If your serial number uses a single “year digit” within the string, that digit gives the year within a decade; you confirm the decade by the machine’s features and approximate age
Quick pattern guide
| What you see on the serial label | What it usually means | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| A longer serial with a date-like sequence | Often includes month/day/year info | Decode using the manual chart |
| An 11-character serial with a “year digit” position | Year is encoded as one digit | Use the manual chart, then confirm decade |
| Only an engine serial is readable | Engine date may not equal machine build date | Find the unit/frame serial label |
Why it matters
Knowing the build year helps you choose the correct replacement parts and service procedures for wear items like belts, skid shoes, and shave plates. It also helps when you are matching assemblies such as a gearbox or auger housing to your exact configuration.
Related maintenance tip while you are checking labels
If you are already inspecting the machine, it is a good time to check common wear parts:
- Inspect the auger drive belt for cracking or glazing
- Check shear pins for damage or missing hardware
- Verify clutch cables move freely and return fully
Last updated: February 2026
What is the fuel mix for a snow blower?
For the MTD snow thrower model 31AH65FH700, the correct fuel depends on whether your engine is 2-cycle or 4-cycle: 2-cycle engines use a gas and 2-cycle oil mix (commonly 50:1), while 4-cycle engines use straight gasoline (oil goes in the crankcase, not the fuel). Confirm your engine type in the owner's manual.
Quick fuel mix guide
Use this as a fast reference before you fill the tank.
| Engine type | What goes in the fuel tank | Typical ratio | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-cycle (2-stroke) | Gasoline + 2-cycle oil | 50:1 | Oil is mixed into the gas |
| 4-cycle (4-stroke) | Straight gasoline | None | Engine oil is filled separately |
If your snowblower is 2-cycle (50:1)
A 50:1 mix means 2.5 oz of 2-cycle oil per 1 gallon of gasoline.
- Use fresh, clean gasoline
- Use oil labeled for 2-cycle/2-stroke engines
- Mix in an approved fuel container first (do not mix in the tank)
- Shake the container to blend, then fill the tank
- Only mix what you will use soon; old fuel causes hard starting and poor performance
If your snowblower is 4-cycle
With a 4-cycle engine, you do not add oil to the gasoline.
- Fill the fuel tank with straight gasoline
- Check engine oil level before each use
- Change oil on schedule to protect the engine (especially for cold-weather operation)
Why it matters
Using the wrong fuel setup is one of the fastest ways to create starting problems, heavy smoke, plug fouling, or internal engine damage. Getting the mix right also helps your auger and drive systems perform consistently under load.
Last updated: February 2026
What is the average lifespan of 31AH65FH700?
The MTD snow thrower model 31AH65FH700 has an Average Useful Life of 7 years or 60 hours of operation. After that point, we recommend having the machine inspected annually and staying current on routine maintenance listed in the 31AH65FH700 owner's manual.
What “average useful life” means
This is a benchmark for typical homeowner use. It is not a warranty length; it is a practical service-life guideline tied to wear, maintenance, and operating conditions.
What counts toward the 60 hours:
- Actual engine run time while clearing snow
- Warm-up and idle time during use
- Multiple short sessions that add up over a season
- Heavy, wet snow use (often increases wear)
Maintenance that helps you reach (and often exceed) the average
Keeping wear parts fresh and adjustments correct has the biggest impact on longevity.
- Inspect belts and replace if glazed, cracked, or slipping
- Check shear pins and replace after an impact to protect the gearbox
- Inspect cables for stretching, fraying, or poor engagement
- Check skid shoes and shave plate for uneven wear
- Use proper off-season storage steps (including clearing snow from the auger/impeller area)
Common wear items you may replace over time
| Wear item | What you notice | Example part for this model |
|---|---|---|
| Auger drive belt | Auger slows, squeals, poor throwing | Snowblower auger drive belt 256963 |
| Skid shoes / shave plate | Scraping, poor scraper contact, uneven clearing | Skid shoe, shave plate (see parts list) |
| Shear pins | Auger stops after hitting ice or debris | Shear pin (see parts list) |
Why it matters
Knowing the 7-year or 60-hour guideline helps you plan preventive maintenance and budget for normal wear parts (belts, skid shoes, shave plates, shear pins) before a mid-storm breakdown.
Last updated: March 2026





