The dyno shop owner and I discussed it and he agreed the timing was pretty much optimal. I appreciate the info and I get the idea of the on-track performance aspect of having individual curves but in reality, I'm not a serious racer (at least not right now) so learning how facilitate timing curves for individual gear changes is not on my priority list. Sadly, the car is still apart and hasn't been down a drag strip for over 10 years. I need to accomplish that first and then get some seat time before I go down any more tuning rabbit holes.
For clarity, the image below is what you're trying to do with a Holley timing table.
I don't know anything about other types of software or ECU programming. The above image is a screenshot of the 2D view that someone put text over to illustrate what the areas represent. The 3D view is a multicolored graph that illustrates the peaks and valleys of the cell values over the entire x y plot.
Again, I have not looked into gear triggers or overlays or what have you. There is probably a way to set that up but I'm not sure what it would be. Most likely you'd wire a switch into the shifter or use data from a driveshaft sensor going into an I/O to trigger something in the software. It's fairly involved if you're not familiar with any of that.
I know I could figure it out, I have other things set up like that - trans cooler fan, radiator fan, low oil pressure shut off etc. Again though, the car needs to be running for me to even consider any of this stuff so it's 20º initial and 34º total for the foreseeable future.