I'll submit a bug on this to the Acrobat development group. If you want to customize the scale, use the Custom Scale. A somewhat sophisticated workaround, assuming that you are printing to a PostScript printer, is to edit the PPD file for the printer to change the imageable area to 0 for the 11x17 paper (either labelled as "ledger" or "tabloid"). The Shrink Oversize Pages option only resizes large pages, leaving small pages the same print size. There is no easy workaround other than third party imposition plugins. The Print dialogue box will appear, as shown below. Click to clear the Fit timescale to end of page check box. On the menu bar (it runs along the top of the screen) click File to see a dropdown menu. To do this, follow these steps: On the File menu, click Page Setup. Click 'File' > 'Properties', and you can set the print option in the 'Advanced' tab. Choose File > Properties, and click the Advanced tab. Apparently, though, the actual Acrobat implementation of "booklet printing" does the equivalent of "fit to printable area" accounting for the unprintable margins on your page. If the Fit Timescale to End of Page option is selected, turn off this option, and manually change the timescale. Launch Adobe Acrobat and open the PDF you want to print using this software. You can set up a PDF to default to specific scaling or print options. Acrobat reduces the full bleed so that it fits within the printable area, and thus printing the. I assume that you might be printing 8.5"x11" pages to 11"x17" paper for your booklet in which case you would reasonably expect that the 8.5"x11" logical pages in your PDF file would be printed full size on the 11"x17" paper. The reason it shrinks is because the PDF is a full bleed. Thanks for the information about doing "booklet printing." That changes the situation significantly. Is there any way I can upload an image here to illustrate the problem? I am doing the booklet printing, so the scale is not available.
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