Jump to content

Waste Ink Counter: Difference between revisions

From Consumer Rights Wiki
typo
Marauder (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{StubNotice}}
{{StubNotice}}


A Wate Ink Counter (WIC) is a firmware-based lockout that causes printers to cease to function when a counter has been incremented above a certain value.
A Waste Ink Counter (WIC) is a firmware-based lockout that causes printers to cease to function when a counter has been incremented above a certain value.


==How it works==
==How it works==
Embedded software inside of a printer tracks how many times the print head has been flushed into an absorbent 'ink pad'. Print operations commonly cause flushing to ensure optimum print quality by preventing print head 'clogging' that would leave unprinted streaks on paper.
Embedded software inside of a printer tracks how many times the print head has been flushed into an absorbent 'ink pad'. Print operations commonly cause flushing to ensure optimum print quality by preventing the print head from clogging and leaving unprinted (white) streaks on paper.


The explanation being given that an ink pad may get soaked and could possibly overflow is one of the explanations given by manufacturers to disable printing all together.
The explanation for the lockout being given is that an ink pad may get soaked and could possibly overflow. Replacement of the ink pad does not reset the waste ink counter as this is simply a counter in the firmware of the device.  


==Why it is a problem==
==Why it is a problem==
WIC counters cannot be easily reset from software. Even though ink pads can be replaced, the printer's firmware will still cease to operate the printer as normal unless the WIC counter has been reset or decremented. Proprietary and undocumented commands must be sent to the printer for this to work.
WIC counters cannot be easily reset from regular driver software or open source software. Even though ink pads can be replaced, the printer's firmware will still cease to operate the printer as normal unless the WIC counter has been reset or decremented. Proprietary and undocumented commands must be sent to the printer for this to work.
   
   
==Examples==
==Examples==


* Item 1
*Item 1
 
==References==
<!-- https://epson.com/Support/wa00369 -->
<!-- https://vocal.media/lifehack/how-i-fixed-my-epson-printer-error-with-wic-reset-tool -->
<!-- https://github.com/Ircama/epson_print_conf -->


==References<!-- https://epson.com/Support/wa00369 -->==
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 11:34, 12 September 2025

Article Status Notice: This Article is a stub


This article is underdeveloped, and needs additional work to meet the wiki's Content Guidelines and be in line with our Mission Statement for comprehensive coverage of consumer protection issues. Learn more ▼

A Waste Ink Counter (WIC) is a firmware-based lockout that causes printers to cease to function when a counter has been incremented above a certain value.

How it works

Embedded software inside of a printer tracks how many times the print head has been flushed into an absorbent 'ink pad'. Print operations commonly cause flushing to ensure optimum print quality by preventing the print head from clogging and leaving unprinted (white) streaks on paper.

The explanation for the lockout being given is that an ink pad may get soaked and could possibly overflow. Replacement of the ink pad does not reset the waste ink counter as this is simply a counter in the firmware of the device.

Why it is a problem

WIC counters cannot be easily reset from regular driver software or open source software. Even though ink pads can be replaced, the printer's firmware will still cease to operate the printer as normal unless the WIC counter has been reset or decremented. Proprietary and undocumented commands must be sent to the printer for this to work.

Examples

  • Item 1

References