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Craftsman 917881050 snow thrower

Craftsman 917881050 snow thrower Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Craftsman 917881050 snow thrower, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

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Browse Parts for 917881050 Snowblowers

  • Snowblower Skid Shoe, Left for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 532174762

    Auger & housing diagram

    Snowblower Skid Shoe, Left

    Part #174762X479

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  • Husqvarna Lawn & Garden Equipment Lock Nut for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 873930500

    Drive diagram

    Husqvarna Lawn & Garden Equipment Lock Nut

    Part #73930500

    Replaced by #873930500

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  • Snowblower Auger Shaft Bearing for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 532420478

    Auger & housing diagram

    Snowblower Auger Bearing

    Part #174658

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  • Snowblower Steering Control Trigger And Cable Assembly for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 532421249

    Control panel / discharge chute diagram

    Power Steering Control

    Part #188303

    Replaced by #532421249

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  • Lawn Mower Hex Nut, #10-24 for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 532191730

    Control panel / discharge chute diagram

    Lawn Mower Hex Nut, #10-24

    Part #191730

    Replaced by #532191730

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  • Husqvarna Snowblower Wheel Klik Pin, 1/4-in for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 532155443

    Wheels diagram

    Snowblower Wheel Pin

    Part #155443

    Replaced by #532155443

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  • Husqvarna Snow Blower Scraper Bar for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 532435830

    Auger & housing diagram

    Snowblower Scraper Blade

    Part #404933X479

    Replaced by #532435830

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  • Snowblower Interlock Spring for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 532193885

    Snowblower Interlock Spring

    Part #193885

    Replaced by #532193885

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  • Frigidaire Lawn Mower Hex Head Thread Rolling Screw, 1/4-20 X 3/4-in for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 817600406

    Wheels diagram

    Frigidaire Lawn Mower Hex Head Thread Rolling Screw, 1/4-20 X 3/4-in

    Part #17600406

    Replaced by #817600406

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  • Husqvarna Snowblower Idler Pulley for Craftsman 917881050 - Part 532180522

    Chassis / engine / pulleys diagram

    Pulley

    Part #180522

    Replaced by #532180522

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Craftsman Snow Thrower 917881050 FAQs

For Craftsman snow thrower model 917881050, the most reliable way to determine the year is to use the engine date code (stamped on the engine) and match it to the manufacturer’s date-code format; your serial number decal on the rear housing also helps confirm the unit’s identity. See the 917881050 owner’s manual for where to find the model and serial decal.

Where to look on the snowblower

Check these common locations before you start decoding:

  • Rear housing decal: model and serial number are on a decal attached to the rear of the snow thrower housing
  • Engine shroud or valve cover area: engine model, type, and code are often stamped or printed on a label
  • Recoil starter housing: sometimes the engine code is near the pull-start assembly
  • Frame near the wheels: occasional secondary ID labels

How the engine code tells the year

Many small engines use a numeric date code where the first two digits represent the year and the next digits represent the month and day.

Example format (common on many engines):

Sample code What it means Result
99011556 First two digits = year; next four digits = month/day Built Jan 15, 1999

If your engine uses a different format, use the engine brand’s decoding chart for that exact engine family.

Quick tips to avoid mix-ups

  • Record the full engine code exactly as shown (include leading zeros)
  • Compare the engine build date to the snowblower’s purchase date if you still have it
  • Use the model/serial decal to ensure you are decoding the correct machine (especially if the engine was replaced)

Why it matters

Knowing the build year helps us match the correct parts and specs for maintenance items like belts, cables, and wear components. For example, if you are troubleshooting auger engagement, the correct replacement belt for this model is the snowblower auger drive belt 532408007.

Last updated: January 2026

For the Craftsman snow thrower model 917881050, we use fresh 87-octane (regular) gasoline unless your 917881050 owner's manual specifies otherwise. Moving up to 91 octane does not improve power or snow-throwing performance in typical small engines; fuel freshness and proper storage matter more.

What to use (and what to avoid)

  • Use 87 octane or higher from a busy station (fresher fuel).
  • Use fresh fuel; replace gas that is more than 30 days old if it was not stabilized.
  • Use a fuel stabilizer for any fuel that may sit between storms.
  • Avoid stale gas (hard starting, surging, poor power).
  • Avoid fuel spills on painted/plastic surfaces; wipe up immediately.

Quick decision guide

Situation Best choice Why
Normal operation in cold weather 87 octane Meets typical small-engine needs
You only have 91 available 91 octane Safe to use, but no added benefit
Fuel will sit for weeks 87 + stabilizer Helps prevent varnish and gumming
Off-season storage Drain or stabilize Reduces carburetor and starting issues

Why octane is not the main issue

Octane mainly measures resistance to knock. Most snowblower engines are designed to run correctly on regular fuel; problems that feel like “needs premium” are usually caused by old fuel, water contamination, or carburetor varnish, not low octane.

Helpful maintenance steps that prevent fuel problems

Last updated: January 2026

The most common problem we see on the Craftsman 917881050 snow thrower is a no-start or hard-start condition, usually tied to fuel issues (stale gas or water in fuel) or ignition issues (spark plug or spark plug wire). Clogged discharge chutes and drive or auger problems are also frequent.

Most common issues (and what to check first)

  • Won’t start: verify the safety ignition key is inserted, fuel valve is ON (if equipped), and you have fresh fuel.
  • Runs rough or loses power: stale fuel, water in fuel, choke set wrong, or a restricted muffler.
  • Poor snow discharge: discharge chute or impeller area packed with snow.
  • Auger not turning: belt or drivetrain issue; inspect the auger drive system.
  • Drive slipping or no traction: drive control adjustment, worn friction components, or linkage issues.

For model-specific operating and troubleshooting steps, follow the 917881050 owner's manual.

Safe way to clear a clogged chute (most common snowblower hazard)

The manual calls out chute clearing as a major injury risk. Use this exact process:

  • Shut the engine off.
  • Wait 10 seconds for the impeller to stop.
  • Use a clean-out tool; never use your hand.

If your chute deflector is not holding position or feels loose, inspect the chute hardware and spring tension; the chute deflector tension spring 532184505 is a common wear item on this model.

Quick symptom-to-cause guide

Symptom Most likely cause Best first step
Engine won’t start Stale fuel, spark plug issue, key not inserted Fresh fuel, check key, inspect spark plug/wire
Engine runs rough Water in fuel, choke setting, fuel restriction Drain/replace fuel, set choke correctly
Snow discharge slows Chute/impeller packed Clear chute safely (engine off, wait 10 seconds)
Auger stops under load Belt slipping/worn Inspect/replace belt (common wear item)

Why it matters

Most “snowblower problems” are simple maintenance items that prevent bigger repairs. Fresh fuel, correct storage, and safe chute clearing reduce downtime and help protect the auger, impeller, and drive system.

Last updated: January 2026

Repairing a Craftsman snow thrower like model 917881050 is usually cheaper when the problem is a normal wear item (belt, spark plug, adjustments, lubrication). Replacing the machine makes more sense when the repair involves major drivetrain or engine work and the total cost approaches about half the price of a comparable new snowblower.

Quick decision checklist

  • Repair when the issue is maintenance-related (oil change, spark plug, lubrication, minor adjustments).
  • Repair when the machine is otherwise reliable and the frame and auger housing are solid (no severe rust or cracks).
  • Replace when you have repeated breakdowns in the same season.
  • Replace when the repair is a major assembly (gearbox, auger weldment, engine-level work) plus labor.
  • Replace when parts and labor together are near 50% or more of the cost of a new unit.

Common repairs vs. “big ticket” repairs

The 917881050 operator guidance calls out routine upkeep and seasonal replacement of wear items (spark plug, belt checks) and shows that belt replacement is a more involved service that can require separating the unit. Use the 917881050 owner's manual to match your symptom to the maintenance and troubleshooting sections.

Repair type Typical cost level Notes
Spark plug, oil change, lubrication Low Often restores starting and performance issues.
Belt replacement Medium Belts are not adjustable; replace if worn or slipping.
Control cable replacement Medium Helps when drive or auger engagement is inconsistent.
Gearbox or auger assembly work High Often parts-heavy and labor-heavy.

Parts that often make repair worthwhile

If your issue matches a common wear failure, repairing is usually the value move.

Why it matters

A well-maintained snowblower lasts longer and costs less per season. The manual’s maintenance schedule (oil, spark plug, belt inspection, lubrication) helps prevent the expensive failures that push the decision toward replacement.

Last updated: January 2026

Most common symptoms to help you fix your snowblowers

Choose a symptom to see related snowblower repairs.

Main causes: clogged chute, damaged auger blades, broken shear pins, worn auger belt, damaged gear case, engine problems…

Things to do: replace the spark plug, change the oil, rebuild the carburetor, adjust valve lash, adjust or replace the b…

Main causes: dirty carburetor, stale fuel…

Main causes: clogged chute, snow build-up in auger housing, broken auger shear pins, auger drive belt needs adjustment, …

Main causes: broken shear pins, worn or loose auger drive belt, auger drive cable failure, damaged auger, bad gear case…

Main causes: snow build-up in chute, chute drive mechanism failure, bad chute control assembly…

Main causes: loose drive clutch cable, damaged drive clutch cable, worn friction disc, scraper blade scraping the ground…

Main causes: dirty carburetor, clogged fuel filter, dirty spark plug, incorrect valve lash, leaky engine gaskets…

Repair guides for gas snowblowers

These step-by-step repair guides will help you safely fix what’s broken on your snowblower.

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How to replace a snowblower 4-way chute control assembly

Replace the 4-way chute control assembly on your snowblower if it’s damaged.…

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Use the advice and tips in these articles and videos to get the most out of your snowblower.

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