Instead of shooting for a big 1.092 OG, with a high FG of 1.025, you would be much better off targeting say 1.072-1.082 OG with an FG of 1.011-1.016 (<--- the lower the better, which may be a problem with extract). When IPAs finish sweet/sticky/cloying, it defeats the whole purpose of an inherently bitter, dry beer. You're in Barleywine territory there.
If you're going to use extract for an IIPA, I would advise on either Briess Golden Light DME or Muntons Extra Light (or Light) DME. Pilsner extract has a distinct bready, almost lagery taste to it. 2-row extract is best for American IPAs. And DME > LME for a variety of reasons, most notably shelf-life and lighter color contributions to the final product.
A portion of Carapils (likely 3-5%) is already in the extract when the maltster made it. Doubling up on it is completely unnecessary. In fact, you never need to use Carapils for an Extract beer. Remove the 7.1% Carapils and bump up the Extract accordingly. Also, shave off about 2% of the Crystal 10 so your extract totals 80.5% of the grist.
Those hops and that schedule, for an American IIPA, are not the best choice. It will lend a slightly citrusy, mainly earthy/grassy profile and not have much Pacific NW character (typically highly citrusy, fruity, floral, piney, and/or resiny). The magnum addition is fine, but I would go with more of a bold mix later on such as Centennial, Amarillo, Simcoe at 10/0/DH. Use at least 10 oz. minimum total recipe hops by weight for an IIPA this big (even if you're lowering it to 1.072 OG). 40-50% of your total recipe hops should be added to the dryhop. That is the most important hop slot when designing an IIPA and all of the best commercial examples fall in line with this idealogy. The next most important slot will be the Whirlpool/Hopstand additions. If you have leftover hops after calculating the bittering addition, you can add them at the 10 minute boil mark, but this is not always necessary.
Be sure to pitch the appropriate amount of yeast into a highly aerated wort held in the low to mid 60s. Yeast attenuation is crucial for a beer like this.
Good luck.