If you fit a (NGK) R-suffix, R for resistive, plug (suppressor plug) then you want a non-suppressor HT cap. If it is a non-resistive plug then you want a suppressor HT cap. Copper wire HT lead is non-suppressor. Carbon-string is suppressor HT lead (and pretty useless).
There is a reason for using a suppressor in the HT system and it is not just to reduce radio interference. It is a "LR" circuit, the HT coil is a coil "L", the resistance of the suppressor "R" alters the time constant resulting is a 'tighter' spark.
The iridium did not cause sooting up on my bike, that was another cause, but I am not alone in having had issues with the iridium. If you look at the iridium electrode, it is the size of a pin head. When a plug gets dirty the spark has to find a clean spot to spark from, they are supposed to get hot enough to self clean; once they fail to find a clean spot they start missing, lose heat and cannot self-clean, a larger electrode increases the probability of finding a clean spot and thus keep running. You may get many many years from an iridium, the same may be said for a normal plug. Some Bullets are somewhat prone to sooting (hence the Twinspark). Just a caveat, YMMV
If you run the motor hard, race it, it gets hot, so you need a 'cold' plug (bigger NGK number). If you run the engine gently you may want a 'hot' plug i.e. so its electrode nose runs hotter and thus self-cleans. I'm running my C5 on BPR5ES which seems to be half a step hotter than the standard '6'
https://www.ngk.de/fileadmin/Dokumente/ ... ode_en.pdf
BPR6ES - The "B" is 14mm, "P" is projected insulator, "R" is resistive, "6" is the heat, "E" is 19mm reach, "S" is copper electrode.
This is for the 500cc EFI (NB), the earlier 500 Bullet takes a B8ES, Do Note the lack of the P for projected nose.
BTW the BPR5ES is for a 1 litre Vauxhall Nova (long gone but I still had a NOS set), the BPR6ES is generally sold for lawnmowers. They are close in heat (half a step?) but the construction/appearance of the "5" is much better than the "6" (go figure).