I disagree... if it is working correctly, there will be no bucking or surging.
My drivetrain had 143k on it when the injector failed, so it is far from tight. Once repaired, the cruise never bucked/surged until recently, when I started having fueling issues again at 168k. When it worked correctly, even having a 5k RV in tow made no difference... it was as smooth downhill as it was uphill.
We need to define bucking/surging.
What I meant is that at a certain speed, on a certain slope, the engine will need just about zero HP to maintain cruise speed. When the speed starts to go up, fuel injection is completely shut off. Then it slows down, and it adds back a minimal amount of fuel (like at idle). If you're sensitive enough, you can feel that. I did not refer to severe bucking, like with a bad clutch, and a novice driver, nearly stalling the engine... A bad FCA might be more to blame than an individual injector, since it is the FCA's job to shut off the fuel.
With a healthy engine, one click up or down on the CC will usually cure the normal bucking that usually occurs on the same downhill at the same speed.