Resetter Epson L1110 [2025-2027]
Remember: The resetter only tricks the software. The physical pad still has all that old ink. If you keep resetting without maintenance, ink will eventually leak out of the bottom of the printer, damaging your desk, the printer’s power supply, and causing paper jams.
What You Need:
Method 1: Using Free Adjustment Program (Popular) resetter epson l1110
Method 2: WIC Reset Utility (Paid but Reliable)
Listen carefully: The resetter only fixes the software. The physical waste ink is still there. Remember: The resetter only tricks the software
Inside your Epson L1110, there is a felt pad (or sponge) that absorbs waste ink. If you reset the counter five times without touching that pad, the ink will climb up the waste ink tube, flood the print head, and short-circuit the mainboard.
A resetter (also called a "WIC Reset Utility" or "adjustment program") is a third-party software tool that communicates directly with your printer’s EEPROM chip. For the Epson L1110 specifically, the resetter is often named: Method 1: Using Free Adjustment Program (Popular)
Epson’s official solution is to send the printer to a service center to replace the physical waste ink pad and reset the counter. This costs $50–$100. However, the L1110 is a budget printer (often $150–$200). A resetter for Epson L1110 is a small software utility that forces the counter back to 0%, allowing you to continue printing.
Warning: Resetting the counter does not physically empty the waste ink pad. You must eventually manage the ink overflow yourself (covered in Part 5).
Epson does not include a physical sensor to detect when the pad is full. Instead, the printer runs a software counter that tracks every drop of waste ink. After approximately 3,000 to 5,000 cleaning cycles or prints, the counter hits 100%.
At this point, the printer displays one of the following: