The "Free-Fall" research was done in the US in the 70s. They concluded that free-fall was better than using a chute.
My experience of free-fall is it's ok at ANY depth. It doesn't segregate, but separates into blobs. On impact there is a terrific vibration effect. Full-length cores of the piles show good quality concrete. I have done cores on 3 jobs to convince the client's engineer.
Normal slump (80mm) needs vibration. 110 mm does not, except for the top few metres, where the impact effect is less.
A slump of 220 mm is self-compacting, if the mix is good. It must not be vibrated, or the coarse aggregate settles out.
Consulting engineers can take a lot to convince them it's ok. Of course the stream of concrete should be centralised. Best done by a good operator with a shovel. You listen for the "plop plop" sound as it hits the bottom. However a funnel with a 500mm tube sitting central in the reo cage is ok too. It's more trouble, needs a crane, but the consulting engineer is more likely to approve the method.