Few-shot class-incremental learning (FSCIL) aims to mitigate the catastrophic forgetting issue when a model is incrementally trained on limited data. While the Contrastive Vision-Language Pre-Training (CLIP) model has been effective in addressing 2D few/zero-shot learning tasks, its direct application to 3D FSCIL faces limitations. These limitations arise from feature space misalignment and significant noise in real-world scanned 3D data. To address these challenges, we introduce two novel components: the Redundant Feature Eliminator (RFE) and the Spatial Noise Compensator (SNC). RFE aligns the feature spaces of input point clouds and their embeddings by performing a unique dimensionality reduction on the feature space of pre-trained models (PTMs), effectively eliminating redundant information without compromising semantic integrity. On the other hand, SNC is a graph-based 3D model designed to capture robust geometric information within point clouds, thereby augmenting the knowledge lost due to projection, particularly when processing real-world scanned data. Considering the imbalance in existing 3D datasets, we also propose new evaluation metrics that offer a more nuanced assessment of a 3D FSCIL model. Traditional accuracy metrics are proved to be biased; thus, our metrics focus on the model's proficiency in learning new classes while maintaining the balance between old and new classes. Experimental results on both established 3D FSCIL benchmarks and our dataset demonstrate that our approach significantly outperforms existing state-of-the-art methods.