I think we are mixing two problems. One is the level of concrete and reinforcement and the other one is segragation of concrete.
For the first one, I can't see anything wrong apart from the installation method chosen. When you withdraw your temporary casing after concreting, the concrete level will be lower because you have at least to replace the volume of the casing you are removing !
For a 1500 mm diam pile I would use a wall thickness of 15 mm at least. The unit weight of such a casing is about 580 kg per m. If you remove 10 meters it is 5800 kg of steel or 0.75 m3. Over a surface of 1.77 m2, this gives a height of about 40 cm and we are talking about 2 inches !
Same for the cage : it is usual to have the bottom of the cage about 20 cm above pile toe, which leaves room for the cage to follow the concrete.
As I said in my first thread it is one of the problems of this installation method : you cannot guarantee cage and concrete level with accuracy ( In some cases the fresh concrete will displace the weak soils and you can experience overbreaks which are far more than just the steel volume replacement.
For segregation, if there is a plasticizer, the quantity might not be sufficient. You should try to see how the slump changes with time : if you experience major changes after a short period ( say 1/2 h) then you should increase the plasticizer quantity, you should also check your fines content. We generally put a minimum of 400 kg of cement in France for deep foundations concrete.