What This Error Means
F17 on most Canon Pixma printers means: ink absorber almost full (waste ink pad warning).
The printer thinks the internal sponge that catches spilled/cleaning ink is at its limit, so it locks or limits printing to avoid ink overflowing inside the case.
Nothing is wrong with your cartridges or PC; the problem is inside the printer base where excess ink is soaked up.
Official Fix
Canon’s official line: the ink absorber must be serviced or replaced by an authorized center. Here’s the clean, warranty-friendly path:
- Power the printer off and unplug it.
- Check around the base for visible ink leaks. If you see wet ink puddles, stop using it and put it on plastic or old towels.
- Look up your exact model on Canon’s support site and confirm that F17 = ink absorber almost full (wording may be “ink absorber is almost full” or “support code 1700”).
- Contact Canon support or a Canon-authorized repair shop and tell them you have an F17 / ink absorber error.
- They will:
- Open the machine and replace or clean the waste ink pads.
- Reset the internal waste-ink counter using Canon’s service software.
- Test for leaks and return it to you.
- Until it’s serviced, the official advice is: don’t bypass the error for long-term use, because a saturated absorber can eventually spill ink inside the printer and onto your desk.
The Technician’s Trick
What a field tech actually does when it’s out of warranty and the customer just wants it working:
1. Protect your space
- Kill the power and unplug the printer.
- Move it somewhere you don’t mind getting dirty (old towels or cardboard under it).
- Put on disposable gloves. Waste ink is nasty and stains everything.
2. Deal with the pads
- On most Pixma models, the waste pads sit at the bottom, under the carriage park area (where the print head rests on the right side).
- Open the top cover, slide the carriage gently to the center with power off, and look down to the right. You’ll see white or gray sponge blocks soaked with ink.
- If you can reach them without full disassembly:
- Use tweezers to lift the pads out.
- Either:
- Replace them with new absorber pads of similar size, or
- Rinse the old pads in warm water until the water runs mostly clear, squeeze them out, and let them dry completely.
- Once fully dry, reinstall the pads in the same orientation.
- If your model hides the pads behind the bottom shell, you may need to remove a few screws and pop the bottom cover. If that sounds like too much, stop here and go to a shop.
3. Reset the waste-ink counter (the secret sauce)
- This is the part Canon doesn’t document. You need to put the printer into service mode and reset the counter.
- The exact button combo varies by model, but the pattern is usually:
- Printer off, USB connected to a Windows PC.
- Hold the Stop/Reset button.
- While holding Stop/Reset, hold the Power button.
- Release Stop/Reset, keep holding Power.
- Press Stop/Reset 4–5 times, then release Power.
- When it enters service mode, Windows should see a new Canon device.
- Techs then use a small utility often called a “Canon Service Tool” to:
- Select your model.
- Run the Clear Ink Counter / Waste Ink Counter reset.
- Power the printer off and back on.
- On a few basic models, holding the Stop/Reset button for 5–10 seconds after the F17 appears will temporarily clear the warning, but that’s a band‑aid, not a fix.
Reality check: if you only reset the counter and never deal with the saturated pads, you’re betting the printer won’t overflow. For heavy printing, that’s asking for a mess.
Is It Worth Fixing? (The Financial Verdict)
- ✅ Fix: Printer is under 4–5 years old, prints well otherwise, and you’re comfortable with some ink mess or a modest repair bill.
- ⚠️ Debatable: Mid‑age Pixma with fading print quality or other minor issues; worth fixing only if you need it urgently and parts/labor are cheap.
- ❌ Replace: Very old, low-end Pixma, already jamming or streaking; if a shop quotes close to the price of a new printer, walk away and buy new.
Parts You Might Need
- Waste ink absorber pad kit (Canon Pixma-compatible) – Find waste ink absorber pad kit on Amazon
- Maintenance box / ink absorber cartridge (for Pixma models that use a replaceable box) – Find maintenance box / ink absorber cartridge on Amazon
- High-absorbency shop towels or microfiber cloths – Find shop towels / microfiber cloths on Amazon
- Nitrile disposable gloves – Find nitrile gloves on Amazon
- Precision screwdriver set for small electronics – Find precision screwdriver set on Amazon
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