I rebuild all of the SOHC4 engines (cast pistons) with .0010" piston clearance, .0080" ring gap on the solid (upper) rings (and .0060" if 1-piece oil rings) and .0040" on the 3-piece oil rings. The only deviation I will take is with the near-limit bores, like the 590cc for the 550 or the 836cc for the 750: then the piston clearance is .0012".
If the pistons are forged and the clearance is less than .0020", then yes, the engine will "stick" if it is run a short distance and stopped (like a trip to the gas station from home?) until it cools off a bit. This is because the forged pistons heat up and cool off slower than the cylinders do, as their materials are different. If you know this and are willing to put up with it and "stay with the program", the forged pistons can work for you. The main "rule" to remember with them is: if you don't fully heat up the whole engine, don't shut it off and try to restart in a couple minutes. The pistons will be temporarily bigger than their bores. Some machinists freak out at this, and start adding excessive clearance to "fix" it, which in turn makes for almost no oil contact between the piston skirts and the cylinders: this then overheats the pistons and makes them melt.
So, it's just that you gotta know what you have with those forged pistons, and ride accordingly....