UPDATE 04/03/2021
Ran through the checks sent to me by Boyer Bransden and could find no intermittent shorts or bad connections that might short to earth and cause the ID unit to spark the coil. So disconnected the ID unit from the points and the coil, but left the power supply and earth in place as suggested and reconnected the capacitor and points to the coil. Checked ignition timing and spark at plug, all appeared to be in order, spark at 0.5°BTDC and a good white/blue spark across the electrodes.
Re-fitted the AMAL MKI 932, without altering the settings. After an initial carb tickle and single priming kick, turned the ignition 'ON' and the engine chimed in on the next kick and then warmed through, whilst holding 1.500 to 2,000rpm. As the engine became hotter, so the reluctance to return to an idle became more pronounced. After about four (4) minutes running, the only way to drop the engine revs back to 1,000 to 1,200rpm was by sticking a finger at the bottom of the slide to impede the airflow, yet not actually disturbing the slide from its position in the venturi.

The revs would then sit happily at ~1,000rpm and if the throttle was opened slightly, immediately climb to 2,000 to 3,000rpm and not fall when the throttle was released.

The throttle cable is brand new, nylon lined, free of kinks, with no tight bends and routed between the tank and frame spine tube. I can wiggle the cable about, this does not affect the revs and there is 2mm of free play in it.
With the engine still hot, I decided to try altering the air screw and slide screw to see if I could prevent the reluctance to return to a stable tickover. Started the engine and returned the airscrew to 11/2 turns out from seating (5/8ths of a turn out from its previous position) and without touching the slide screw the revs rose as expected. I then blipped the throttle and with a blowback, the carb and inlet rubber stub were blown off the inlet mount!
So, from this latest pantomime I think that I can deduce that the problem does not lie with the Boyer Bransden IU unit, but with a weak pilot mixture?

Increased engine heat reduces the density of the air/fuel mixture. Hence, the climb in engine revs due to a weak mixture/fuel starvation and the blip of the throttle resulting in backfiring in the inlet tract, with the increased valve overlap of the 173A cam over the old soft (less overlap) OME 450 MKIII cam timing.
Because the AMAL MKI 932 has the cast in pilot jet (20?), I am going to revert to the AMAL MKII 2932 and use a 35 pilot jet in the float bowl, with the air screw ~11/4 turns out from seated, a 260 main jet, a 106 needle jet, with the needle clip in the 3rd from top groove. From my extensive notes

this might result in something that will idle, run and pick up without hesitation and hopefully not blow its carb off. But the plug colour may still appear weak (no ocherous to tan staining on the plug insulator). Should I worry about this, as long as the insulator isn't looking like bubbled glass?
If anybody would care to share their actual AMAL MKII 2900 series set up on a Ducati single (preferably a 450) that actually runs, even if it is a race bike, rather than a road bike, I'm willing to give it a try. Thank you.
Good health, Bill