Yeah, that's the one thing I didn't much consider when I got the camera system. Here is a big fat for instance. We use belin upcut bits, which work great on aluminum up to .125" in a single pass, as well as ACM, but when cutting with the camera on a print, the upcut bit pulls the edges of the vinyl up, requiring some cleanup. After I did this the first time, I said H*LL NO, this should be a finished product, so I set the machine up to read the marks, but then to also cut the marks out (The marks for this can be set to different things, for instance this run was .25" black circles.) Once it cut the circles, I slapped pieces of black vinyl over the holes, flipped the panel, flipped the artwork so it would match, then reran the camera scan program with the actual shape instead this time. It worked great, no lifting on the vinyl in the least! Though I did find out the vaccuum is strong enough to pull the panel into the table, and any chips left behind before the panel was loaded will be nicely pressed into the vinyl/sheet itself. Also, anywhere the cut line traversed a line previously cut into the table did not actually cut all the way through the laminate. The lam was pulled into the trough by the vacuum while the bit cut the dibond and the print material. Long story short, cutting prints out of dibond should be done with a straight or downcut bit.