To use the adjustment program, users will need to:

The software was a relic of 90s design—gray boxes, jagged fonts, and a daunting "Particular Adjustment Mode" button. Arthur followed the digital breadcrumbs left by others. He navigated to the "Waste Ink Pad Counter" setting. His heart hammered against his ribs as he clicked "Initialize."

. The machine, usually a reliable workhorse, had suddenly halted. A cryptic message glowed on the small LCD screen: "A printer's ink pad is at the end of its service life."

If you are just looking to reset the Ink Levels and not the Waste Ink Pad counter, that is usually handled automatically by the EcoTank system once you fill the tanks and hold the stop button for 5 seconds to reset the chip reading.

Unlike HP or Canon, Epson does not embed "Waste Ink Pad" reset counters in the user menu. The ET-2750 (part of the EcoTank series) has two specific maintenance needs that require this program:

The Adjustment Program is not a permanent fix. Epson designed the ET-2750 with non-replaceable waste pads (unlike older Workforce models). After two resets, the pads are fully saturated. At that point, the only solution is a – drilling a hole in the case, routing the waste tubes to an external bottle. The Adjustment Program is essential to enable that mod, but the mod itself requires physical hacking.