What model number is a Craftsman 6.75 lawn mower?
A “Craftsman 6.75” label usually refers to the engine horsepower class, not the mower’s model number. For the mower identified as a Craftsman 21-inch 6.75-hp rotary walk-behind mower, the model number is 917377911. Use the mower’s model tag (not the engine tag) to confirm.
Look for the model label on the mower deck or rear housing; it is typically a sticker or metal tag.
- Check the top of the deck near the engine mounting area
- Check the rear flap or rear wheel height adjuster area
- Check the handle support brackets near the lower handle bolts
- Wipe dirt and grass off the label so all digits are readable
- Write down the full model number exactly as shown (all digits)
Many Craftsman mowers use a separate engine model number (like 143981002) that identifies the engine only. The mower model number (like 917377911) identifies the full mower and is the one you use for most chassis and deck parts.
| You are looking up | Example number | What it identifies | Best for finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mower model number | 917377911 | Complete mower | Deck, wheels, handle, drive parts |
| Engine model number | 143981002 | Engine only | Carburetor, ignition, starter, air filter |
If your question is really about the engine on a Craftsman 6.75 mower, the engine model number is commonly on the blower housing or valve cover area. For Craftsman engine model 143981002, common service parts include:
- Craftsman lawn & garden equipment engine air filter 28424 for restricted airflow and hard starting
- Lawn & garden equipment engine fuel tank cap 37845 if the cap vent is plugged and fuel flow is affected
- Needle seat 631021B and Craftsman lawn & garden equipment engine carburetor float bowl 631867 for carburetor flooding or fuel leakage
Using the wrong model number is the fastest way to order the wrong part. The mower model number matches the mower’s frame and deck; the engine model number matches internal engine parts like the carburetor, ignition module, and starter.
Last updated: February 2026
What year was Craftsman 143981002 made?
Craftsman model 143981002 is an engine model number, and it was used across multiple years on different lawn and garden products. The exact build year is identified from the equipment’s model and serial number tag (not the engine parts list), then matched to the engine’s specification code.
Look for the model and serial number label on the machine the engine is mounted on (mower, tiller, snowblower, etc.). Common locations include:
- Under the seat (riding mower)
- On the rear frame rail near the hitch plate
- On the deck shell near the discharge chute
- On the handle support or frame (walk-behind equipment)
- Near the engine shroud, but on the equipment frame, not the carburetor
For Craftsman lawn equipment, the equipment tag usually provides the best date clues. The engine itself may also have a spec or date code stamped on the blower housing.
| Where you find it | Example type of info | What it’s used for |
|---|---|---|
| Equipment model/serial tag | Model + serial | Determines production range and correct parts diagrams |
| Engine shroud stamping | Spec code, date code | Narrows the engine version and approximate build period |
| Carburetor/ignition part IDs | Part numbers | Confirms the correct configuration for tune-up and repair |
The same 143981002 engine family can have different carburetor settings, ignition parts, and fuel system components depending on the exact spec code and production run. Getting the year right helps prevent ordering the wrong gasket, O-ring, or ignition module.
If you are troubleshooting or refreshing the fuel and ignition system, these are common wear items that can differ by version:
- Needle seat 631021B (carburetor sealing and fuel metering)
- Craftsman lawn & garden equipment engine fuel tank cap 37845 (tank venting and fuel delivery)
- Lamination 35135B (ignition module component used for spark generation)
- Tecumseh lawn and garden equipment engine carburetor rebuild kit 632760B (carburetor service parts)
Last updated: February 2026
What are the parts of a lawn mower engine?
A typical lawn mower engine (including Craftsman model 143981002) is made up of fuel, air, ignition, and mechanical systems that work together to create combustion and turn the crankshaft. Common serviceable parts include the air filter, carburetor components, ignition module, starter parts, and internal engine parts.
- Fuel system: stores fuel and delivers the correct fuel flow to the carburetor
- Air intake and filtration: cleans incoming air so dirt does not damage the cylinder and piston
- Ignition system: creates spark at the right time to ignite the air-fuel mixture
- Starting system: spins the engine fast enough to start combustion
- Mechanical rotating assembly: converts combustion pressure into rotating power
These are some of the most common parts customers replace or service on this engine:
- Lawn & garden equipment engine fuel tank cap 37845 (helps vent and seal the fuel tank)
- Craftsman lawn & garden equipment engine air filter 28424 (protects the engine from dust)
- Lawn & garden equipment engine air filter assembly 35403 (housing and filter support)
- Needle seat 631021B (carburetor sealing surface that helps control fuel level)
- Craftsman lawn & garden equipment engine carburetor float bowl 631867 (holds fuel for metering)
- Lamination 35135B (ignition module component used to generate spark)
| Function | What it affects | Example part on this model |
|---|---|---|
| Air filtration | Hard starting, black smoke, loss of power | Air filter, air filter assembly |
| Carburetion | Surging, flooding, won’t stay running | Needle seat, float bowl, carburetor O-ring |
| Ignition | No spark, misfire | Ignition module |
| Starting | Slow crank, no crank | Electric starter, starter motor armature |
| Internal compression | Low power, blow-by, oil use | Cylinder, piston assembly, piston ring set |
Knowing the major engine parts helps you troubleshoot faster. For example, a dirty air filter often causes rich running and power loss, while carburetor sealing issues (needle seat or O-rings) commonly cause flooding, fuel leaks, or hard starting.
Last updated: February 2026
What kind of engine does a Craftsman riding lawn mower have?
A Craftsman riding lawn mower can use several different engine types depending on the mower model; the Craftsman 143981002 we support here is an engine model number, not a complete riding mower model. In general, Craftsman riders commonly use single-cylinder or V-twin 4-cycle gasoline engines from makers such as Briggs & Stratton, Kohler, or Tecumseh/Lauson.
Use the engine’s ID tag, not the mower deck size or seat style.
- Find the engine model and spec numbers stamped on the blower housing, valve cover, or a tag near the starter
- Match that engine model to the parts list; 143981002 is one such engine model
- If you only have the mower model number, use it to look up the mower first, then confirm the engine tag matches
- Compare key service parts (air filter, fuel cap, carburetor parts) to confirm you are in the right parts list
A common quick cross-check is the air cleaner style; for this engine, parts like the Craftsman lawn & garden equipment engine air filter 28424 and lawn & garden equipment engine air filter assembly 35403 are typical tune-up identifiers.
Most Craftsman riding mower engines are:
- 4-cycle (no oil mixed in the gas)
- Air-cooled
- Carbureted (with a float bowl and needle/seat)
- Recoil start or electric start (many riders use electric start)
| Engine type | What it’s like | Common symptoms when it needs service |
|---|---|---|
| Single-cylinder OHV | Simple, economical | Hard starting, surging, vibration |
| V-twin OHV | Smoother, more torque | Uneven idle, backfiring, power loss |
| Older flathead (L-head) | Common on older units | Hard starting, poor compression |
The correct engine identification controls everything: the right carburetor parts (like a needle seat), ignition parts, starter parts, and even basic maintenance items. Ordering by “Craftsman riding mower” alone often leads to mismatched parts.
Last updated: February 2026

