Here's what I posted in another thread a while back:
<A few years back one of the mags, maybe Grassroots Motorsports did a comparo on basic "good" street tire
vs. autocross-grade Summer top level street tire
vs. drag radials.
As I recall there were a couple of tenths acceleration advantage as you stepped up each level in that order. But they couldn't test multiple brands of each type of course.
The DWS06 being an all-season has less rubber on the road, higher void %, than a Summer tire, all else being equal, and the rubber won't be quite as soft/grippy WHEN WARM. (If you're racing at 40 degrees F the DWS06 will totally out-grip a Summer type, and you're not even supposed to drive on the latter when it's freezing. I had a set of the previous-gen DWS.) So if you don't need all-season, I think a PS4S though not cheap is going to have more grip and per Tire Rack the Conti ECS is very close, again a Summer tire. If you need all-season, I really liked the handling of the previous version of Michelin A/S3+, and per Tire Rack they have a little more performance than the DWS06.
If you can stand higher harshness, the full on Bridgestone RE71R is stickier than any of those on curvy tracks. Unsure about drag traction but its braking is also better, and that's just acceleration reversed right? Tire Rack test, the RE71R stopped a BMW in 78 ft from 50 MPH which is ~1g average, higher than even a Gen 4 accelerates.
All that said, I don't have drag experience nor a Gen 4 and don't know if the sidewall issues mentioned have that much impact.>
Update - a 1.8 second 60 ft is a little over 1 g, a 1.6 second is 1.46 g, so I was off there, but in any case RE-71R's will out-grip DWS06's, which will stop the BMW in 88 ft rather than 77 (new test). So if you are just going for the drags, and are OK with a tire that has to be changed in winter, the RE-71R is grippier, but the sidewall won't bend as much as tires not optimized for track day. And it will be noticeably harsher in daily driving than the DWS06.