As mentioned in the comment by Bhargav Rao, we've been doing a lot of checking, testing, adjusting, then more checking and tweaking of the Triage review.
Triage was built to quickly handle new questions. The key here is to handle questions quickly. If we uncapped Triage, then that kind of defeats the purpose of the quickness of the review. We'd never want Triage to grow to be the size of, let's say, the Close Review queue. We have very specific requirements in place for what hits Triage and a cap is one of those requirements to prevent a large backlog.
Now, just because we aren't going to uncap Triage doesn't mean we're done trying to improve the workflow of the queue. Based on your question, I decided to take a look at how many questions were eligible for Triage vs. how many were actually reviewed by Triage to see if there were any improvements we could make.

Prior to the increase in queue for Triage from 100 to 200 items at a time (around August 4th), we were averaging about 65% review of eligible questions in the queue. We adjusted the settings and number of questions reviewed jumped to about 90% of the eligible posts...in other words it was a huge improvement. Around the beginning of September, the number of eligible questions increased (most likely due to school starting). The increase was enough that review wasn't able to keep up with the demand.
That brings us to today, or I should say Friday, when I started looking at this. The criterion for a question to hit Triage had not been adjusted in quite some time, so we reviewed them and on Friday we make a little tweak to the settings. This should actually limit the number of questions that are eligible for Triage review.
Based on the little adjustment we're back to reviewing about 95% of the posts that are eligible. Is this the only fix we're going to make? No. We're going to keep an eye on the settings to see if there is anything else that we should fine tune on down the road, but uncapping won't be one of them.