I'm looking for an inverse system $(X_\alpha)_{\alpha < \omega_1}$ of vector spaces (EDIT: over a finite field) such that, for some $\lambda \geq 2$ with $\lambda < \lambda^{\omega_1}$ (I believe the case where $\lambda = \kappa^\omega$ for some $\kappa \geq 2$ is particularly interesting), the following conditions hold:
The transition maps $X_\alpha \to X_\beta$, and the maps $\varprojlim_{\alpha < \omega_1} X_\alpha \to X_\beta$, are all surjective.
For $\alpha < \omega_1$ a limit ordinal, the map $X_\alpha \to \varprojlim_{\beta < \alpha} X_\beta$ is injective.
For $\alpha < \beta < \omega_1$ and $\gamma < \omega_1$ a limit ordinal, $\lambda = \dim X_\alpha = \dim \ker(X_\beta \to X_\alpha) = \dim ((\varprojlim_{\delta < \gamma} X_\delta ) / X_\gamma)$.
$\dim(\varprojlim_{\alpha < \omega_1} X_\alpha) = \lambda^{\omega_1}$.
Conditions (1) and (2) are basic structural conditions. Condition (3), in addition to stipulating that $X_\alpha$ remain "small" below $\omega_1$, also stipulates that the "rate of change" of $X_\alpha$ be constant, at $\lambda$. The last part of (3) also rules out simply taking $X_\alpha = V^\alpha$ for some $V$ of dimension $\lambda = \kappa^\omega$. The point of the cardinal $\lambda^{\omega_1}$ in condition (4) is that it is the dimension of $\prod_{\alpha < \omega_1} X_\alpha$, and thus the obvious upper bound subject to the other conditions.
For comparison, consider an inverse system $(X_n)_{n \leq \omega}$ with $X_\omega = \varprojlim_{n < \omega} X_n$ with surjective transition maps such that $1 < |X_n| < \omega$ for all $n < \omega$. In this case, if $X_\omega = \varprojlim_{n <\omega} X_n$, then there is a "jump" in cardinality at $\omega$, all the way up to the continuum. Part of the motivation of the above conditions is to look for similar "jumps" in cardinality at the bigger ordinal $\omega_1$.
In fact, the full motivation of the above conditions is more specific, but in some sense it does boil down to asking for the growth to be "controlled" below $\omega_1$, and suddenly "jump" at $\omega_1$.