Epsonsx130reset Adjustment Program Upd

Even with the UPD version, users face issues. Here’s how to solve them:

| Error Message | Cause | Solution | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | “Communication error” | USB interference or driver conflict | Uninstall printer from Devices, reinstall official driver, restart PC. | | “Model name mismatch” | Wrong program version | Download the SX130-specific UPD (not SX125 or SX135). | | “Timeout error (code 200)” | Printer firmware blocked the reset | Try a different USB port (USB 2.0, not 3.0). Disable firewall. | | Counter resets, but error returns after a week | Physical pads saturated | The printer is re-detecting leakage. Physically clean pads. | | Program crashes on Windows 11 | Missing MSVBVM50.dll | Install Visual Basic 5.0 runtime libraries. | epsonsx130reset adjustment program upd

🔧 Pro Tip: If the printer locks up during the reset, do not panic. Turn it off, remove the power for 1 minute, then repeat the process from Step 3. Even with the UPD version, users face issues


Technically, unlimited. Practically, after 3–4 resets, the pad is fully soaked and must be changed. 🔧 Pro Tip: If the printer locks up

The Epson Stylus SX130 is a popular all-in-one inkjet printer (print, scan, copy) known for its affordability and reasonable print quality. However, like many modern Epson consumer printers, it incorporates a waste ink counter. The printer tracks how many cleaning cycles, power-on events, and prints have occurred. When this counter reaches a pre-set maximum (often around 15,000–20,000 pages or a certain amount of purged ink), the printer locks itself with a “Service Required” error or blinking error lights (often alternating ink and paper lights). The intended solution is to take the printer to an authorized service center.

However, many users prefer to reset the counter themselves using an Adjustment Program—a piece of service software not officially released to the public but leaked or reverse-engineered from Epson’s internal service tools.

The Epson SX130 Adjustment Program is functionally effective. It does exactly what it claims to do: it revives a dead printer. However, the user experience is poor, and the software is technically illegal (unauthorized redistribution