Sounds to me like the geometry is wrong. Too tall of a feed tube for the riser, and not
enough open space in the larger barrel. I these are the most obvious problem areas to look at. Read Evan's book for the proper geometry. The summary is on page 28, if I recall correctly.
Filling with
concrete is not the best idea either, although that may not become an issue until it has been used for a while and the concrete begins to fail under the high heat. Basically as the temperature approaches the boiling point of
water, the water inside the concrete must be able to expand and escape, and that usually means breaking the concrete.
EDIT (2nd edit for typo):
Just caught that the "cement" poured in at the bottom of the barrel is also refractory. As already noted, there are no overheating concerns in that case. A small point, would be to observe that Peter VDB has mentioned this manifold/transition area works more efficiently is there is a small height difference between the bottom of the barrel and the outlet; I'm thinking on the order of two inches, but I expect that is a ratio of something.
To know
of if the area surround the fire riser is sufficient, you need to calculate the CSA. There must be as a minimum the same CSA of the fire riser as is available to flow down the sides of the barrel, and given there is more surface area, and therefore more friction against those sides, somewhat more would seem to be logical. The same is also true of the area immediately above the top of the fire riser and the top of the barrel.
Which makes sense. If either of these areas are smaller in CSA than the fire riser, there will be a constriction or bottleneck of the air flow.