You are abolutely right. However, hydro forming occurs by (internal) pressure, not axial pressure as you suggested. The hoop stresses occurring here are very small, in the order of 8 MPa for the actual dimensions, so we need at least 100x higher pressure to achieve hydro forming.At 100 PSI the plunger is subject to approx 15Lbs of force, and that force is spread evenly over the surface of the plunger. 15 Lbs is not able to 'hydroform' the plunger. <..> Hydro forming is done with pressures in the thousands of psi.
For this reason, Masseyracer's brass plunger should work just fine.
Upon drilling through the plunger's crown, spring and plunger popped out. What I found was that a sludge mud pit had formed below the plunger, creating suction at the plunger. Because of the anaerobic nature of a mud pit, a considerable partial vacuum can develop, acting at the internal and external surface of the plunger holding it firmly in place. Anyone walking with Wellies in deep mud has experienced this effect! Because the small vent bore was blocked, no pressure equalization was possible, but this happened when drilling through the crown! Once bore and plunger were cleaned of sludge, the plunger slid freely and showed no tendency to stick in the lower position.
To avoid this happening again, it's advisable to clean plunger and corresponding bore in the timing cover at certain intervals.
- Knut