Your first question is answered and well [documented][1]. I'll focus on the more interesting and as-yet unanswered question.

> Why is there still a limit of 40 when there are so many waiting?

The real answer is because regardless of if there are 100 or 1000 or 1000000 items in the queue, you as a person have limits. The more tasks you do, the less effective you get with them. The more likely it is to make mistakes, to just not care anymore, and to get complacent in your voting patterns.

Now, you personally might have more in you than the default amount of 20, or even more than the upgraded amount of 40. And in theory, when you reach your limit, you stop. But the reality is as humans, we keep going long past our limit of reliably performing the tasks.

This is the entire reason there's a maximum in the first place. It's why there's a reputation cap. It's why there's voting limits. It's why most of the constraints in the system exist: people should not feel pressured or compelled to perform any of the activities of the site, whether it's moderation or participation.


  [1]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/252584/enough-fuzzying-lets-let-everything-into-the-close-queue-and-age-out-questions