Delta compression uses the previous block of bytes to be used as a reference in the compression process for the next blocks. This approach is increasingly ineffective due to the duplication of byte sequences in modern files. Another delta compression model uses the numerical difference approach of the sequence of bytes contained in a file. Storing the difference value will require fewer representation bits than the original value. Base + Delta is a compression model that uses delta which is obtained from the numerical differences in blocks of a fixed size. Developed with the aim of compressing memory blocks, this model uses fixed-sized blocks and does not have a special mechanism when applied to file compression in general. This study proposes a compression model by developing the concept of Base+Delta encoding which aims to be applicable to all file types. Modification and development carried out by adopting a dynamic block size using a sliding window and block header optimization on compressed and uncompressed blocks giving promising test results where almost all file formats tested can be compressed with a ratio that is not too large but consistent for all file formats where the ratio compression for all file formats obtained between 0.04 to 12.3. The developed compression model also produces compression failures in files with high uncompressed blocks where the overhead of additional uncompressed blocks of information causes files to become larger with a negative ratio obtained of -0.39 to -0.48 which is still relatively small and acceptable.