dale,
We had a small Penton , Hodaka , Cam Am shop back in the early 70's and did our own boring.
We found that Wiseco pistons made at that time were prone to sticking if set up to Wiseco's specs. End result , we would only fit one to a cylinder on the customers request.
10 years ago we started restoring and riding vintage dirt bikes in the woods and at the yearly ISDTRR we have on this side of the pond. Pistons ( NOS ) were in short supply for one engine we were using so we called Wiseco to see if they could come up with a cross for another brand they made that would work.
Wiseco had a Tec line back then and we brought up the sticking problem we had experienced. The Tec went into why the old pistons would do this and what they had changed over the years to correct the problem.
Wiseco in 2001 was using the same alloy they used in their pistons in the 70's. The difference in a new Wiseco was in the way the piston was machined.
Pistons are egg shaped front to back and tapered from top to bottom. This is ( we are told ) done to allow for the different rates of expansion caused by the differences in the amount of material present at any one spot in a given pistons design.
The pistons are " Cam " Ground to a shape that approximates round when they are at temp and under load.
New Wiseco's have worked well for the Penton , and Hodaka guys here in the US in competition .
If all you can find are the old run pistons then fitting them looser is an option but still may give you trouble in the end.
Best thing we have found , you can do in a home shop , is run the engine in with a good high output fan blowing over it for 10 or so minutes . Pull the top end down and hit the high spots on the pistons with 400 grit wet dry. Reassemble and do it again until you no longer find signs of high spots.
Its something the Road Race folks had to do years ago. Its a pain in the lower extremity's but is is do-able with limited resources and if no other pistons are available.
hope this is some help,
john d.