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I have a 4 page file containing construction drawings and it is 60.7 MB in size. I have tried to reduce size but Adobe Acrobat Pro DC stops working. I have also deleted pages and created separate files (1 page each) and the file size of the 1 page documents are 60 MB in size. I thought the individual pages would reduce in size. Why aren't they?
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PDF files are not linear in this way. They consist of content streams that can be shared across pages (which is a very good thing).
For example, let's say you use the same background image in all the pages of your file, and the size of that image is 50MB.
Instead of creating a new 50MB copy of the image for each page the PDF producer (if used correctly) will create a single instance of it and then reference it from each page, so there's only one copy of the image. If you then take that file and sp
3 Replies 3 Community Expert , /t5/acrobat-discussions/file-size-will-not-reduce/m-p/10307888#M131017 Jan 15, 2019 Jan 15, 2019Copy link to clipboard
PDF files are not linear in this way. They consist of content streams that can be shared across pages (which is a very good thing).
For example, let's say you use the same background image in all the pages of your file, and the size of that image is 50MB.
Instead of creating a new 50MB copy of the image for each page the PDF producer (if used correctly) will create a single instance of it and then reference it from each page, so there's only one copy of the image. If you then take that file and split it into individual pages then each one of those will need to have a copy of that image, which means they'll also be around 50MB each.
The same thing happens with fonts. My guess is one of those two things is what's taking the most space in your file.
You can find it out by opening the Content panel on the left, right-clicking the top-most icon and select Audit Space Usage.
You'll see a window like this one, which will give you an indication as to the size of each type of object in your file: