Let's say you pour in 6.4 and runoff is 5.7.
1. If you saturated the soil, waited an hour, and poured a little more to displace only enough runoff to measure, 5.7 is representative of the ph of the soil. (At least when wet. If you used a decent soil probe you'd see it swing between 5.7 and 6.6 as it dries). It had enough time to reach equilibrium and wasn't diluted with too much pour-thru.
2. At the opposite extreme, let's say you water until you get runoff. No time to sit and equalize to the soil's ph. You're in a hurry to go to work, you just pour until 20% runoff which happens within 2-3 minutes.
soil ph = runoff ph - (pour ph - runoff ph)
4.8 = 5.7 - 0.9 (which is 6.6 - 5.7)
The idea is, with so little time to equalize to soil, you extend the runoff ph even further.
3. If you water in intervals, pre-wetting the soil, pouring more in 5 minutes, maybe getting runoff after 2-3 pours over 10 minutes, you'd do something between #1 and #2. Maybe
half the difference.
This is where a decent soil probe like I mentioned in my prior post can help you develop a feel for interpreting runoff.
Neither runoff nor the probe are "accurate." But, they can help you see trends. If you water the same way every time (3 stages of wetting, saturation and final pour/runoff over 15 minutes), and you see the runoff change from 6.2 to 5.6, and you start having ca or mg deficiency (which are available at higher ph), you might raise your input ph to 6.8 to hold the soil higher. And/or, do a water-only feed to reduce salt build up.
The probe helps too because if you confirm the wet soil is at 5.6, and you see it rise to 6.8 as it dries, you know you're getting decent exposure to the nutrient ranges. However, if it only raises to 6.2, you might question if you're watering too soon.
People get hung up about how runoff and probes aren't accurate. But, when working with new nutes or medium, I think it's useful information to help find the sweet spot. Once you have it dialed in you don't have to continue monitoring it.
In your case, you have to recall how long it took to get the runoff.
The photos look good, but it's hard to tell because they aren't under normal light (color corrected). I'd increase the feed ph to raise the soil ph and continue watching runoff.