Caseless Ammo is also self-oxidizing. Aramis, you need to forget about the G11 ammo and consider the fact that there have been advances in the ammo to fix problems found in earlier prototypes.
The cook-off issue hasn't gone away with any of the caseless weapon systems. During testing, one of the Metalstorm tubes cooked off prematurely - dumping all 6 rounds at once.
Even cased ammo cooks off if sustained long enough without coolant - it's just not as much a risk, and NOTHING (but a change in physics) can alter that the case reduces the heat gain and increases the transfer time of the chamber heat to the projectile, likewise nothing (but a change in physics) can change that the heat of ignition will be lower than the combustion product temperature for effective detonation/deflagration/explosion as needed for firearms use. And again, nothing but a change in physics can alter that an object in vacuum cools to equilibrium FAR less rapidly per degree than an object in atmosphere cools to ambient per degree.
There are some things I can't see happening. Caseless being safe in vacuum is not quite that far out, but cased will always be inherently safer in almost all environments due to the removal of heat and insulation via mass of casings.
A soldier's weapon needs to be reliable, field maintainable, safe and deadly. Caseless loses one of those, and reduces two more. It's axiomatically less suited for use if the other factors are equal (which they are not). The unequal factors include ammo weight per round (Caseless is nearly half), production capability (caseless requires more chemistry and smaller tolerances for safe rounds; caseless has almost no dedicated production), field reload manufacture capability (negligible for caseless, surprisingly high for cased), vacuum effects on the weapon (irrelevant for earth, and tipped highly against caseless by Physics).
Perhaps a table will help
Condition | Cased | Caseless | Gauss |
Ammo mass | baseline | half baseline | 0.1 to 0.25 baseline |
Ammo volume | baseline | baseline | 0.1 to 0.2 baseline |
Action mass | baseline | about baseline | baseline to double |
Field round manufacture | vehicle portable* | impractical* | Limited materials* |
Vacuum effect on rounds | Sealed against inherently | uncertain and/or variable | immune |
Vacuum effects on weapon | special lubricant needed, increased chamber heating | special lubricant needed, increased chamber heating | Special lubricant, increased weapon heating |
Cook-off resistance | moderate | low | extreme** |
Action Heat Tolerance | high | high | moderate |
Adaptability to varied ammo load | High | low | moderate |
* | | | |
** | | | |
[tc=3] Cased can be modified for black powder which is forward manufacturable from fairly available materials, including human excrement.
Caseless has issues of field manufactured ammo being extremely subject to either supply limits or much increased cookoff
Gauss weapons require ferrous metals to work.[/tc]
[tc=3]it's nearly impossible except with explosive rounds.[/tc]