Was discussing this with a mate (at the pub, as you do), about whether having different fork damping settings on each fork leg is inherently dangerous or not; he says it is, I say it isn't.
Now I would never set my own settings to be different and I wouldn't suggest anyone else goes againt manufacturer specs either, though I reckon it isn't the disaster matey reckons it is. Surely as the forks are effectively clamped together at the bottom by the wheel spindle, even if they want to move at different speeds (which of course they will want to with differing damping rates), they can't due to the spindle. They MUST and DO move together as one effective suspension unit and you get a combined damping rate.
Consider this extreme example - set both compression and rebound rates to max in one leg and min in the other, you effectively get 50% overall. The forks will still move together and the stability of the bike isn't compromised.
Some new bikes actually have rebound controlled by one leg and compression by the other, therefore each leg must have zero compression and zero rebound damping respectively.
Obviously it's best to have the forks set to the same so you actually know the exact settings. I reckon matey has a point if the vehicle has 4 wheels that can move independantly and different damping on each corner could unsettle the vehicle, but on 2 wheels I say not, possibly in the past with thin forks and weak yokes\frame with lots of flex, perhaps, but not now given the rigidity of components nowadays.
Any opinions?