Just looked at your graph, I must be dropping power down the track. My 60's are 1.90s, yet I'm only getting mid 14s at 95ish.
Your 60's are fantastic. The very best I've gotten are 2.1's. 1.9's are a huge advantage. Yes, you are not building the power in 3rd, 4th and 5th gear that you should. Of course, track conditions, weather and altitude make a big difference. My best times were back in early spring and I am at sea level.
Something is not right. With your CAI you should be hitting 14 flat or high 13's under good conditions, depending again, on altitude. Maybe you have a boost leak somewhere.
Look at these two additional graphs on horsepower and rpm versus time on the same run. Note how the engine nanny holds power back severely in first gear and pretty bad in second gear.
I get a good whp of 265 when first shifting into third gear, when the clutch fully engages, but then the effect of aerodynamics pulls the power down. Aerodynamic drag is something you never see on a static dyno. Guys think they are actually putting down their high gear dyno numbers on the track. They are not. The effect of wind resistance once you get above 60 mph is very significant and gets worse as speed increases.
See also the aerodynamic drag chart I pulled from a physics research paper. The testing was done on a 5th gen Corvette, so drag coefficient was probably similar to our cars. Notice how much horsepower it takes to overcome drag as speed increases -- that is horsepower that has to be reduced from static chassis dyno numbers.
You are losing power on the top end and it is probably boost related or you are running under bad temp/barometric pressure/altitude conditions.
I sure wish I could learn to launch like you. What is your secret, if you don't mind. lol. You can probably see from the charts that I'm launching too aggressively and fighting wheelspin with the throttle. I hope some of this helps. Note that the very brief hp spikes on the chart going into 4th and 5th and the rpm spikes at the end of that chart are electronic artifact and should be disregarded.