Like others have already said
mph is a product of HP
ET is a product how well the car works
with your 60ft times it seems your car is doing
'pretty well' for it's HP levels,
there could be some improvements
depending of a few variables traction suspension etc.
IMO more gear will help the car move easier,
especially a heavy car
with a tight(er) converter, you may need more wheel speed
(
gears can help some there, especially in the 1st 60-100ft,
where a shitload of ET can be made up or lost)
so it gets into your optimum power band easier/quicker
(
'steeper rear gears' will affectively make the converter feel like
'it doesn't have as much stall speed', because of the gears & it's torque multiplications,
you may not be able to leave at 'as high of an RPM off the starting line')
Dead hook & maybe bog off the starting line
too much tire diameter for the gears you have & HP available
Speculation not knowing all your combo specifics
IMO for a dedicated dragrace car
IMO a 4.30:1 rear gear
with the 30" tall tires would be more like it
(
4.10:1 is a decent compromise if it's used for street etc.)
if you had more torque/hp the 3.91:1 wouldn't be an issue at all
I personally like the bigger tires, more than smaller tires
more footprint contact patch & rollout,
albeit take more to turn them or if you have the HP to turn them
gear will help there too
like others have said
try shifting later in 1st & 2nd,
if the valve springs & bottom end can handle it
if it's not near the optimum RPM or too low at the finish line
it more than likely,
needs more gear
or possibly the converter is giving up some mph too
a bigger carb 'may help' mph slightly better,
it's not gonna' be night & day 10 mph, unless it's starving
I still doubt it...
if you have it, a differnent or bigger carb
that's an easy change, a bit of jetting
& acc. pump nozzle changes or acc. cam changes
I'd try it, test it, it couldn't hurt
(a properly spec'd carb spacer may help some too)
500hp on a 750cfm is borderline for optimum flow
IMO 850-950cfm may wake it up a bit, in my experiances
CI X RPM divided by 3456 = net CFM needed
440 x 6000 div. 3456 = net
763 cfm if it's 100% optimized
you only truly get about 80% optimized
on most out of the box style carbs, even with jetting changes
that aren't trick, polished, ported or flowed/tweaked
specific for your combo etc.
your 750cfm carb probably isn't actually giving you 750cfm
more like 600cfm net
750cfm x .80 = 600cfm net flow
a 950cfm @ 80% optimized or 950cfm x .80 =
760 cfm net
the type of entry into the carb
can drastically affect the flow rates even
it's a lot more than just the carb's advertised cfm
or getting fresh cooler denser air to the carb too
nothing is set in stone, unless you/we know all the variables
weight, track conditions, water grains, altitude, relative air density, etc.
properly tuned engine, prepped track, your complete combo etc.
let alone the carb mods
but like others have said,
smaller tires or shift rpms testing, may tell you the story
if any of that crap made any sense
good luck