| Последно посещение: Пон Мар 09, 2026 12:04 am | Дата и час: Пон Мар 09, 2026 12:04 am |
Using a resetter can help:
Common manual steps (may vary and not always possible): Resetter Epson L3210
It’s not a "one-click" experience. You usually have to disable your antivirus (because these tools are often flagged) and use specific browsers to download them. Using a resetter can help: Common manual steps
| Risk | Explanation | | :--- | :--- | | | If you reset without cleaning the pad, the sponge overflows, ink runs inside the printer, and may short-circuit the mainboard. | | Voided Warranty | Using third-party software to modify the printer’s memory void the manufacturer’s warranty. | | Firmware Updates | Epson occasionally updates firmware to block known resetters. If your printer auto-updates, the resetter may stop working. | | Bricking the Printer | Using the wrong adjustment program (e.g., for L3110 on L3210) can write corrupt data to the EEPROM, turning the printer into a paperweight. | | Malware | Free resetters from suspicious websites often contain keyloggers, ransomware, or crypto miners. | | | Voided Warranty | Using third-party software
or third-party antivirus software, as these tools often flag resetter programs as false positives. Download & Extract
Inside your printer is a sponge (waste ink pad) that absorbs ink purged during head cleaning. Epson programs the printer to stop working after a specific number of purge cycles—roughly 8,000 to 15,000 pages. This is a hardware failure; it is a planned counter stop. The resetter tells the printer’s EEPROM that the counter is back to zero.