It seems that some of you in this thread are not directly related to shock tuning, so I will offer some insight that might completly confuse you, or it may shed some better light on the subject. Shock tuning is a "black majic", you CAN NOT look at a force/velocity curve and make a judgement of the damper. The ONLY thing a force/velocity curve is good for is to compare the left and right damper to make sure they are built corectly, and to sort of gage the relative "stiffness" of a damper. The really important part of a damper is the reactions to accelerations and decelerations of the rod. A force/velocity curve only shows you the reaction force at an instantaneous velocity, and doesn't show you the whole picture. I can have 40 different dampers built with the SAME EXACT force/velocity curve that all feel VERY different. That being said, it sometimes is a little hard to explain to upper management "what you did all week" when the curve of the new dampers is almost right on top of the old ones. The biggest factor is how the three main element work together and transition to each other(on a twin tube design you also have a bottom valve that works with the piston in compression, but that gets complicated to explain). You have a bleed area, a main leaf valve area, and an oriface area that create damping force. All of these have to work seperatly AND transition to one another smoothly to produce a "quality damping feel". Usually, when I tune shock absorbers, I don't request "damping force changes", but I do request part changes and not worry about the resulting damping force. I usually talk in terms of slit/notch leaf valves, or the leaf stack combination(thickness, diameter, and order). There are alot of parts inside a damper, but once you understand the basics of what each specific part effects and you can visualize what is going on inside the damper and relate that to what you are feeling when you drive the car, shock tuning gets pretty easy for you. I don't mean to confuse any of you, but the actual damping force number is not an exact representation of what is going on.
A force/displacment curve(shaped like an American football), gives a little bit better picture of what is going on, but it still leaves out the accelerations. If there was a way to acurately measure and record a graph that shows exactly what you are feeling, that would be a great tool, but the current dyno's are just not very capable of doing that. It takes a large amount of energy to reproduce what is actually happening on the car.