2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer Power Train:transfer Case (4-wheel Drive) Problems
NHTSA component category: POWER TRAIN:TRANSFER CASE (4-WHEEL DRIVE) · data through 07/12/2026
Source: U.S. NHTSA complaint data. Complaints are unverified reports from vehicle owners — a complaint is not a confirmed defect.
How power train:transfer case (4-wheel drive) ranks on this vehicle
Share of the 1,149 complaints citing each category; one complaint can cite several. Full breakdown on the 2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer overview page.
What owners report
“ON 12/13/01, CONSUMER HAD RECALL 01V283000 REMEDY PERFORMED ON THE TRANSFER CASE. ON 1/6/02 WHILE DRIVING APPROXIMATELY 15MPH IN 4-WHEEL DRIVE MODE, THE BACK END…”NHTSA complaint 8023610 — filed 12/03/2002
“CONSUMER STATES AT 55 MPH THE VEHICLE TRANSMISSION SWITCHED TO ALL WHEEL DRIVE. CONSUMER STATES THERE WAS A TREMEDOUS LOSS OF POWER, TOSSING CONSUMER LIKE…”NHTSA complaint 8023443 — filed 11/29/2002
“CONSUMER STATED WHILE VEHICLE WAS IN 4-WHEEL DRIVE MODE, THE TRANSFER CASE ON 4HI AND 4LO LIT UP, AND THE SERVICE 4WD LIGHT IN THE…”NHTSA complaint 564591 — filed 03/05/2002
Excerpts are shortened and scrubbed of personal details; they are individual, unverified reports.
Power Train:transfer Case (4-wheel Drive) complaints by year filed
Frequently asked questions
Does the 2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer have power train:transfer case (4-wheel drive) problems?
Power Train:transfer Case (4-wheel Drive) is the #3 most-reported problem area on the 2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer: 68 of 1,149 complaints on file (5.9%). Complaints are unverified owner reports, not confirmed defects.
How many complaints does the 2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer have in total?
1,149 complaints were on file with NHTSA as of 07/12/2026. Across all categories, 103 involved a crash, 35 involved a fire, 98 reported injuries, and 4 reported deaths.
What does NHTSA's power train:transfer case (4-wheel drive) category include?
NHTSA assigns each complaint to standard component categories; this page reports the POWER TRAIN:TRANSFER CASE (4-WHEEL DRIVE) category exactly as NHTSA defines and records it.