Sorry for necroposting, but I was googling to figure out if Click of Death also happened on 250MB drives because I saw one for sale at a very cheap price, and started playing around with the five 100MB drives I own. For some reason, they were all doing the CoD sounds, some more than others, two not even recognizing floppies, despite only one being marked as BAD with a permanent marker. So I google for a few solutions, and found one on a dead page about slightly moving the head mechanism forward. I did it to the BAD drive and it's now the only drive working perfectly fine! I ran two 100MB floppies through the Trouble In Paradise software, the first gave 2 soft errors, the second not a single soft/firm/hard error! I will try to do the same to the other drives, one will definitely be added to my Windows 98 computer, along with the rest of the arcaic hardware already in there. It started as a retro gaming computer, but it's now also a retro hardware hoarder computer, because why not? 😀
This just goes to show you that the problem varies from drive to drive, and sometimes there's no problem at all other than stuck mechanisms or other simple solutions, most probably due to lower quality materials used on later drives to cut costs without the proper testing.
If someone else finds an old ZIP drive with the Click of Death problem, just google for some workarounds that people tried through the years, maybe it will work for you or maybe it won't, but in the end you might be saving one more old piece of hardware from permanent death.
RETRO-W98/2K: MSI MS-6309 v1.0, P3 1Ghz, 3x256MB, GF5600 128MB AGP, VD2 PCI, RTL8139D PCI, TB400-2541 PCI, ESS1868F ISA, 160GB IDE
RETRO-WXP/7: ASUS P5KPL-AM EPU, XEON E5450 3Ghz, 2x2GB, GTS 450 1GB PCI-E, 120GB SSD, 1TB sATA