Another suggested that the engine was overly compressed thus the added head gasket. I have never heard of this with our glow engines.
For once, I suggest the head gasket approach. This used to happen sometimes on the ST46 as the very soft gasket compressed, got tightened, compressed some more, tightened, etc. At some point the clearance got a touch too small, and then it would kick-back, misfire, make loud knocking sounds, etc. Replacing it with a new stock gasket usually cured it. I have similar things in other engines, too,
Note, before anyone suggests it, lowering the nitro in these cases didn't cure it. It appeared to be a function of only the head clearance/compression ratio, nothing else.
I suggest one very thin head gasket be added, or a thicker single gasket be used. Maybe 0.003 or so, it shouldn't take very much.
Jacking heads up with handfuls of gaskets willy-nilly is a really bad trend in stunt in recent years. Most people have no idea what they are doing or what changing the compression even does or what it is used to adjust. But when you have a real problem, making a tiny change is perfectly reasonable.
Brett