Dear arrian,
When you say when you save them under another name, do you mean the crystal report or the image within the report?
If it is the report that gets smaller when you save with another name, then I don't have an answer.
If, however, it is the file size of the image when you save it separately, that could be due to the application that you are using and the format that you are saving it to.
You need to look at the properties of the "original" image that was inserted into the report. Note the dpi, the width, height, and the bit rate.
I just had a software vendor with a similar problem request my help as they were replacing images in the existing reports to reflect a name change for the application. The file size was growing from 65 kb to over a mb.
When I looked at the properties of the original image it was set to 8bits and with a smaller dpi than the new image which had a 32 bit rate.
So, when Crystal converts the image to a bitmap internally it was growing the size of the file. We had the graphics guy redo the image to make the dpi and bit rate back to 8 and now the new images do not make the file size grow out of bounds.
regards,
ro
Rosemary Lieberman
rosemary-at-microflo.com,
Microflo provides expert consulting on MagicTSD and Crystal Reports.
You will get answers more quickly if you read this before posting: faq149-3762