If you were to tune them on a shock dyno to tune them and never adjust them again then MAYBE. But I'd be more apt to listen to the guy with the national Autox championship title who has dyoed them...
Also on adjustability:
Also on adjustability:
Happy Fun Fact: Formula One cars use non-adjustable shocks. They get away with this by running the car on a seven-post shaker rig that plays back suspension movements recorded previously on that track, using the data the collect on the rig to tune the shocks, and once the shocks are tuned, those are the shock forces they use at the race. Once they're right, they're right.
OK, so what if they aren't right? Wouldn't it be good to have an adjuster for tuning purposes?
Well, yeah, it would be - if the adjuster worked as advertised. In my experience on my shock dyno, most adjusters DO NOT work the way you think they do - in some cases, horrendously. It's like having a blind man adjust the focus on your camera. What's the point?
And that's if the left and right shocks on the same end of the car act the same - when in reality, they almost certainly do not (unless you've taken the time to match them)