It never ceases to amaze me the denominations that people use for valves, it seems that people out there just pick arbitrarily names to describe valves or they use a non technical dictionary to traduce a valve name into English.
Fortunately the valve industry in America is well developed and has standardized on generic names for all types of valves.
A piston valve has its rooters in a piston pump and later developed into a valve.
Today this design, originally developed in 1922, by Richard Klinger who invented the piston valve by replacing the disk and seat of a conventional globe valve with a cylindrical piston and two resilient, replaceable sealing rings.
To my knowledge the above design of Piston valves are not manufactured above 12" (300mm.)
In waterworks sometimes Plug or Cone valves are referred as piston valves. The most recognize manufacturer for this type of applications is Henry Pratt, they make both a Cone and a Plug valve. Although in my opinion their Cone valve is a plug and their Plug valve is relay not a True Plug, but more like a C-Ball Valve or you can call it a C-Plug.
BTW: Ram Type Drain Valves or any type of drain valve design are NOT used to supply a tank. That is why they are called "Drain Valves". Further more I can not imagine a tank that would require a 24" Drain valve, not to mention a 32" one. Not to say that there are not 24" or larger drain valve's out there, but the applications are very rare. In the old Crane Valve catalog they had Y-Pattern globe valves in a drain design, all the way up to 36"