... It's hard to have faith in any brands these days as everything is made so cheap thanks to the DISCOUNT store mentality comparing apples to oranges telling you it's the same thing. Sorry getting off topic a little.
NOT REALLY off topic at all. I work 40-60 hours a week on all types of cars, some call it making a living at it. (I beg to differ about the "living" part of that statement)
I REFUSE TO TUNE UP A CAR WITH A CUSTOMER'S OWN PARTS for this very reason. It isn't because "I earn less on the job" that I refuse, it is because I refuse to go with "anything unkown" about what somebody else calls out as "I already tuned it up". People stick cheap parts in to save a few bucks while costing themselves on the other end. THEN, people drop spark plugs, crack them, smash down the electrode and so on. When a tune-up arrives that somebody else has already been working on, it usually is a larger nightmare than one that was left alone. "To many cooks" sort of a thing and they don't want to here they screwed up.
This situation on this particular car is really along the same line. This car has aftermarket heads on it designed to make it "run better". Well, at this point in time as in most aftermarket "upgrades", the O.P. has an epic fail. It might also have aftermarket ignition system, who knows. I "assumed" earlier since this is a Concours forum, it was all stock. This is obviously not true. The ONLY logical first step approach is to start with the basics and the OP claims all of that is good. The only logical next step is to pull the plugs and run a compression test and/or pull valve covers and check for proper valve function. Having listened to the sound bites in the video link provided earlier, I am over 95% sure it isn't simply "a spark plug issue" (again, "assuming" stock components & running on regular pump gas)
"ASSUME"=ass-u-me Quit "assuming" since it ran good when it was parked, that ANY of these aftermarket components are "known good" since these aftermarket, "made to make parts stores money" items are the #1 cause of grief to the professionals and the Do-it-Yourselfers alike.
As far as "Spark Plugs" are concerned, the only "correct" plug for any car (or lawn mower for that matter) is WHATEVER THE FACTORY INSTALLED. Now, remove factory components and replace them with aftermarkets junk and you open up a can of worms. You better have it Dyno'd when you are done "re-inventing the wheel"...just like the engineers all do whenever they have a new creation. You cannot simply "bolt on new parts" and expect it to work right. These things were engineered to run on Pump Gas of the 60's, we need to have minor adjustments to make them run right on pump gas of today, but this is a science...You cannot just simply "guess" or listen to the Parts Store Geek.