I found another Hondaman thread on these pistons:
http://www.z1enterprises.com/detail.aspx?ID=4074
Between these and the CycleX pistons, which did you prefer? Not much of a price difference at $30 either.
Well, being the consumate Engineer, my answer to that one is, "It depends".
I'm not nice to my 750, never really have been. I've forced it to push a Vetter as hard as the bike would go when touring, I leave stoplights and signs hard enough to wear a flat spot on the rear tire in one year of riding (so then I have to go to the hills to make it round again), and I often ride in heavy city traffic in summer with the Vetter lowers in place, because it might rain. That cooks it but good, even boiling the fuel in the carbs on occasion. Even then, I'll leave the stoplight and go for gold, mostly to cool ME off.
And then, I'll go out once in a while to see how fast it will still go (with the Vetter).
So...I want pistons that can take that. This means they must have very even casting, good materials, and good surface finish. ART pistons have done well, distorting only about 0.002" in the skirt area, and not burning oil, even with 80,000+ miles on the last 0.25mm set.
If I build a low-budget bike, it won't get the extra-power head and such things if the pistons are not top-notch, at least not from me. Over the years, I have seen some marginal pistons appear that worked OK, which I take as a tribute to the engine's design and the rider's moderation, but always on stock engines with stock heads and cams. Headers won't make enough difference to matter, either. And, I have built some of these engines, usually for riders I know aren't going to the dragstrip during the summer, and don't exhibit the riding experience (or craziness) to go out and flog a bike that will pass the ton quickly. In those situations, I am sure the EMGO pistons will work flawlessly. Just be sure to remove the flashing from the edges and holes.
If you're going racing with them, you might want to have the EMGO units tested at least: but then, it would be cheaper to buy some of the other ones out there. Serious racers magnaflux the rods and have the pistons closely examined with density (X-ray and similar testing was common when I did it) checking to catch any possible voids or weak spots: not cheap! It can prevent a fractured skirt, though, which is worth the cost.