What I've done to tune a DP for the street is basically do everything (Except idle)backwards!
Do the Idle mix first, for best vacaum at idle,
Then the primaries, for best lean cruise (I've dropped 8 or more sizes from factory to achieve this.)
Then the power valve, both the valve itself and the channel restrictions, which may need to be enlarged to compensate for the lean primaries. Tune for throttle response. Drive the car, with a vacaum guage you can see. That way you'll know at what throttle opening/speed/load the power valve opens. You get a bog before, it needs to open sooner. you get a bog after, you need to drill the restrictor.
Then the primary pump, to eliminate any boggyness that's still there.
I would do all this with the secondaries disconnected.
Finally hook the secondaries back up and tune them for WOT. They will need to go richer, again to compensate for the lean primaries.
When it's done right, they run GREAT! But, a DP will not tolerate a "dumb foot" Unlike an air valve or vac sec carb, airflow is directly connected to your left foot. If you give the engine more air than it can take, velocity will drop, fuel flow will lag, and it will bog.
Example would be "mashing the throttle from a slow roll." A Q-jet, with it's tiny primaries and air valve controlled seconaday's, will not have a problem. The secondaries won't open until the engine can "USE" them.
With a DP, that kind of behavior will inevitably make it bog. The engine simply cannot use that much airflow that quickly. The solution, of course, is to take a second, or a second and a half, to get the throttle wide open.