Buy a couple dozen Bellevilles and see how high you can stack them on your desk, like a high tech Jenga.
I'm betting the pile will fall over before you run out.
Note also that the inner and outer edges are both rough, so while it is possible to guide them, there will be uncertain friction against the guides.
You might be better off stacking closed and ground coil springs, which at least give you a finite radius on the rubbing surface.
You could also make one really long spring with square-ish coils from a long piece of hollow bar, given a really long lathe and a milling spindle on the slide, or maybe use a wire saw on the slide and make it look like a very long Heli-Cal. ... but cutting springs from hollow bar is normally done for very high force within a limited envelope, not for very high stroke within a limited envelope.
... but no matter how nicely you make it and how perfectly square the ends are, it will still buckle, and need guidance.
Maybe you could line the outer tube with plastic, if you can find one that will take your downhole temperatures.
As israelkk said, providing some more of the spring parameters you actually need would help us eliminate some of the most inappropriate possibilites.
How much 'idle length' do you have available? Could you, for instance, use an extension spring that's ten feet long, plus a two foot stroke, making your assembly's OAL approx 12 feet?
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA