I am not a gunsmith. I am not a rifle manufacturer. But I do have an opinion and a open forum to share said opinion,so here we go. Ill start with a couple of observations about the stock and a rifle action.
Fisrt of when you look at the cadex bedding system. It consists of 4x roller pins. they look to be maybe 3/8 in diameter, maybe smaller, and maybe 1/2 in long. There are 2 pins on either side of the action screws. The recoil slot I assume is a square notch with plenty room around the sides and bottom of the recoil lug. Also I will take it that the action screw holes are larger than that action screws, as are they are in most applications usually does, so there are no other forces being put on the screws other than the clamping compression.
Now if we look A remington receiver has a 1.38 in diameter.
First point, when two circles or radius are touching each other, there is a very small foot print. Iam not sure how to figure out the exact width of each point of contact but I am sure its small, like a pencil line small. Maybe .020 in. So your total foot print and support of the action is 4x 1/2in long, 20 thou wide contact points. That does't seem to be a hell of a lot.
To expand on this, the pins are probably a precisely machined polished diameter, a factory action is not, and often has a parkerized finish, with is not smooth. So smoother roller on a ruff and non precise reciever would give even less surface in those already small contact points.
For that alone, I would bed.
Point 2. What does this stock have to prevent the action from twisting or clocking in the stock. From what I can see, only to things. One being the friction between the back of the recoil lug and the stock. The other, are the 4 small contact points of the pins... which are on rollers. So if anything I would think the rollers would aid in the twisting of the action.
Considering both factors, I would think that if a person installed one of these onto their rifles, and years later removed it, you you finds 4 pencil thin wear marks dug into the receiver, and wear marks in the action holes where the action twisted until the action screw came into contact with the side of the wholes.
I would think a traditional bedding would do a better job than this system.