My finds have been tight, so it wasn't until the end of October. Final solution for this became obvious when I broke open the Iomega Zip and discovered the top head had slid caticornered off to one side. Just like one of the pictures ion one of the posted click-of-death sites. I have no idea how it could have done this- not sure why it was even attached- magnetism?. Anyway, off to e-bay I went and bought an almost new zip 250. Then came the sweating part- how many of my disks had it damaged?
I was lucky, was able to recover all of my data that had been saved on zips, 1-250, the rest 100's. A few of the disks I then noticed would not eject when told to. I threw them away.
Bottom line for me is I will never again consider Iomega as a safe format. I am keeping the new 250, and some of the disks(will sell the rest), for use in individual transfering situations.
Related to this, having initially fallen in love with my Peerless drive, I purchased a new "top part", as mine, it turned out had died. There was no way to know whether it was the top or the bottom docking part- so I had to find both. This wasn't as easy as one would think, as even though the Peerless has only been discontinued since last January- it requires some digging to find them. I ended up getting them, from a guy who had posted them thru Amazon.
Like the Zip, I will keep this, and its 20gb removeable drive, only for use in specific situations.
I could give a rats ass about the lawsuit that Iomega settled. They do not deserve anyone's loyalty given their refusal to replace in kind these head-shifting Zip drives.