Just to inject a little Drag Racing thoughts that I have learned over the many years of racing, even though I can't say how they affect the heavier turbocharged vehicles we drive (as I have never raced the truck, one wheel drive impaired) is this; if the vehicle cannot get hooked to the track very well, the ET suffers but the MPH goes up because the wheel speed got a "head start" so to speak. The opposite is true for a vehicle that gets lots of traction and does not "bog" off the line will run a better ET and a lower MPH. Take for instance my race car, if the slicks and track are there I generally get a 1. 34 second sixty foot and run in the area of 10. 06 to 10. 13 given the varying conditions. If the track isn't there I will get up to 1. 45 sixty foot times and run around a 10. 25 or so. My MPH doesn't change that drastically but will change in the area of 2-3 MPH. As I stated, some of this does apply to our trucks, but there also is a lot more that goes along with it. For instance, if I was running a big block and ran the same times, my MPH would be 4-6 MPH higher because of the larger cubic inches and moving more air through the engine.
I always look at the ET as Torque coming off the line and MPH as Horsepower in the higher rpm's.
David