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Really solid guide, I just wanted to add my two-cents, if that's alright!
-Roll center, generally all cars will have a roll center that lies well below the CoM of a car. Since the degree to which a vehicle rolls is a function of the lever arm between the CoM and the Roll Center, raising the roll center is actually the tuning component that decreases body roll.
-Damping, I totally agree with most of what you wrote above, but I think parts of the "Softening Rebound" entries have the opposite effects. At corner exit, when weight is transferred to the rear, Softening the Front Rebound setting allows the front suspension to quickly expand, allowing the front tires to make more contact with the road, increasing front grip. Softening rear rebound is the same, in that, when weight is transferred to the front, softer rebound allows the rear suspension to expand, increasing rear grip.
Feel free to let me know if you'd like sources for anything!
All the best,
Xema
It has helped me a lot on the 60's race cars as well on the rear wheels.