Use only aircraft birch plywood (never Lite Ply) for profile nose doublers and extend them to the high point of the wing. Use only hard maple (not basswood) engine mounting beams and extend them back to the front of the wing. This will lick most of the problems. (Also, don't drill holes in the aft engine mounts - weight savings is minimal and it can compromise strength.) A thick balsa sheet inboard tripler (?) can be helpful.
Use a modern engine, they tend to run smoother, handle easier, and have a softer 2/4 break. Try removing an inline fuel filter, as they can sometimes make the fuel line resonant. Use a uniflow tank, make sure there are no leaks in the fuel system. (I've also found recessing the fuel tank, so that its centroid is near the center of the profile fuselage, a la Imitation, or a la full fuselage to be very helpful, though not related to vibration problems.)
Use an engine mounting plate, and never use washers below the engine case mounts (e.g. to get engine offset). The idea is to have large contact areas between engine lugs, mounting plate, engine mounts, and fuselage nose area.
On a metal tank, use a thin (~ 1/8") sheet of rubber between it and the fuselage side. I find cheap flat rubber sink stoppers are a good source for such rubber. You can cut it with scissors.
Balance your prop. I personally like certain wooden ones (say 11/6 EW RevUps, no longer made), but APC molded composites tend to be good quality and low cost. Never use a crappy ancient molded black (10/6) plastic Master Airscrew prop from your uncle's ancient Flite Streak - in addition to being poor for stunt use, they tend to be poorly balanced, they're crude. (MA has some good modern props, I've heard.). The combination of a unbalanced prop and old Fox .35, no engine mounting plate, washers under engine lugs, Lite Ply/basswood nose construction, etc. can turn a profile ship nose into a 1" blurr at certain speeds.
I've seen plastic tank setups (say on Grady's Forerunners) work extremely well. I can see where the plastic could preclude some vibration on the fuel system, and a clunk seems to be a very good feature.
Brett is correct about the potential complexity and difficulty of profile nose vibration problems. However, once you settle into a workable setup, such problems will disappear, and a reliable stunt run results. What works well for others and for you are not necessarily identical.
Electric power will definitely clear up your fuel line bubbling problems.

Good luck!
L.
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