Have you attempted to torque the intake manifold bolts on the problem side? You described....''BUT all 4 plugs on right side were heavy carbon black..." Is this "fuel" black, or oil build-up "carbon" black? It's hard to discount an oil fouling problem here, being that the whole bank is fouling? If the intake manifold bolts were all lose, you could factor it to... oil being sucked into the intake ports via intake manifold gasket failure. Without looking at the plugs, I have no idea if it is fuel, or oil yet?
Describe if by grazing your finger across the porcelain of the plug, you feel a powder effect (fuel) or a sticky, hard to clean your finger (oil) effect?
I would try for a leakdown test on the problem bank for a head gasket failure also?
No offense Sherry, but... I believe your statement is misleading or more in line with a fallacy: "dont run it too hard for a few hundred miles until the plugs have seeted and are firing normally." Once a plug is torqued to specs, there is no "seat time." Once the engine is lit, there is no plug I know of that needs a break-in? If anything, it begins to deteriorate from brand new. Race engines are run into the ground with fresh spark plugs. The engines are running at peak performance at the drop of the flag. Again, no offense. We are all here to learn and try to give our most accurate information.