Our 'new' Husqvarna died today during it's second day of mowing this season. Sounds like the voltage regulator or a short somewhere. Started the day with a strong battery and my wife mowed for hours. After lunch it started right up but an hour later it died. I had to jump it but the headlights were orange. Shortly after it dropped out the electric clutch.. Not charging no more...

The hydrostat slips going uphill and runs away going down hill. The wiring harness is a mess.
So I dragged out the 2000 craftsman that I started to get working last summer when the fairly new Husqvarna started to act up. I had added an electric fuel pump which seemed to be the only way to keep the aluminum Kohler running. It still has a starting problem but with the assistance of the alternator on my Cummins, I got the craftsman running. The drive belt is way past it's prime but I managed to slowly finish the lawn without stalling the craftsman. While putting the drive belt back on I noticed the Hydro fan is missing all it's blades. Time for some parts from Sears!!
Why the long story...
1) I have AYP/Huaqvarna products.
2) Unless someone gives me another one, these are my last AYP products.
3) My father's craftsmen from the 80s is still running for a neighbor but that was a cast iron engine
4) Today's Craftsman mowers may still be the best bang for the buck, but these are not our father's craftsman anymore
What do I like: Low cost, great parts availability from Sears, fairly easy to work on, I can afford to have two large unreliable mowers so I know one will usually get the job done...
What don't I like: Durability is far worse than with older craftsman, wiring harness, i don't like having to use the great parts system from Sears, Service contract pricing went nuts. I used to buy the Craftsman because the service contract was worth it's weight in gold.
If you are happy with a 2000+ Craftsman / AYP, great and good luck to you!
If you are unhappy with a 2000+ Craftsmen / AYP, I feel your pain!
If you are shopping for a garden tractor, don't just buy a Craftsmen because your Dad was happy with his. Shop around first and if you go elsewhere, do your homework before buying another brand just to discover it came off the same assembly line.
(We thought we were buying up when we bought the Husqvarna. I really do have a great Husqvarna chain saw!! )