The capacity of a vertical form, such as that of a wall form or column form must be sufficient to contain the pressure exerted by the liquid head of the concrete.
Agilia and other self consolidating concrete mixes are placed into the formwork in a far more liquid state than any "normal" structural concrete I have ever seen.
On a micro scale, "normal" concrete placed and vibrated in place will certainly show full liquid properties at the point of vibration. "Normal" concrete is also placed in lifts, ideally prescibed heights per hour and at worst limited by what human labor can allow. Agilia can be placed as rapidly as the placement method allows. Rather than localized areas of liquid behavior, the effacts of retaining a 150 pcf liquid would be seen throughout the form.
Conventional formwork designs dictate an allowable placement rate of concrete for a given temperature, varied based on admixtures and other historical factors. With time, the concrete first placed will no longer behave as a true fluid, thus the allowable pour rate.
Formwork should always be designed appropriate for the situtation. Forms intended for use with "normal" concrete may not be adequate when used with Agilia.
And as stated above, construction tolerances acceptable with normal concrete may lead to blowouts and loss of concrete wehn used with a mix a free flowing as Agilia.
That said, Agilia is really an amazing product, something useful that we will get used to and get much use out of.
Regards,
Daniel