Kieth Black hypereutectics use a different alloy and that material makes the top of the piston concentrate more heat in the ring land area. Which is why those particular hypers need a wider ring end gap on the top ring. They experienced failures because like many "everything is bad" reports builders thought they knew and didnt read instructions. Hypers are lighter and much stronger than factory cast. But, they are brittle. Meaning they will take a lot of power safely, but they dont tolerate detonation for long. And if the top rings are not gapped properly, they have been known to pull the tops ott the pistons. not the pistons' fault. It was the builders'. You dont want them in an engine that will run large NOS loads. You dont want them in a situation where the piston speed gets really high. They are not designed or priced for that. As a result of the piston speed deal, I won't ever use them in a longer than stock stroke build. but, I've never had an issue with them. They hold up well, and are great for a budget build. Do not sweat them if you have them. Just dont buy an NOS system for it
. Every American auto maker is using them because they are good pistons when spec'd properly. In those applications, the first damages one sees when adding a blower is the explosion of the pistons... because they are not designed for it...lol. They are run much tighter in terms of piston to wall claerance than any forged or cast piston. Which greatly enchances ring seal and both power and longevity, and the heat they retain means it stays in the chamber where it's making power instead of leaching into the components.