“You can milk anything with ni . . . “ Oh, different train of thought, but same concept. You can compact just about anything better than just dumping it into a pile (or trench). It doesn’t matter if it is soil, aggregate, concrete, timber or some pens. It is just a matter of what kind of effort and how much.
Darth referenced compaction to a proctor standard. Perhaps this is not the best for the stone. Would you use the modified Proctor to compare the level of voids there were in a pile of 2x4’s? Doubt it. Would you drive some piece of equipment over them and get them to compact? I hope not. Does this mean that a dumped pile of timber could not be made more compact? No. You just have to stack it properly. Then you would likely weigh the stack, and measure it to determine density of the wood pile.
This is the same concept with any of the soils and aggregate we use in our business. You need to use the proper technique for the material. There is the wheel roll, sheepsfoot, vibrtory, (the dreaded) flooding, and preloading of a site to name a few. It is a matter of finding the proper method for the material. It is about finding a way that will compact the material more than the potential failure catalyst (moisture, vibration, heavy static load, etc).
So, when it comes to the aggregate: Sure, if you dump 5 feet of it into a trench and push/vibrate on the top, you are not going to get much. If you dump it into a Proctor mold and beat the hell out of it, again, you will likely not get much. If you run a relative density, you should see some change from the low to the high (thus it is compactable). And if you place the aggregate in thin lifts, perhaps add a touch of moisture to lubricate things, and move the aggregate so it fills the voids, then you are compacting it. But that is too hard for the contractor that is looking for the easy way out.
It is not that it is “self compacting”, but that it is “easily bridging”. When the moisture, load, and/or vibration causes that bridging action to fail, you then have the problem, which others have posted above.