They're burning.
Unlike soil, you do not have to dry out coco in-between watering (read below). You also don't need to feed them nutrient with every watering unless you are running drain-to-waste with a bit of runoff at each regular watering.
Overfertilisation can look like a nutrient deficiency because it actually causes the deficiency by locking out certain nutrients through the over-use of other nutrients. However, it is nearly always accompanied by Nitrogen tip and leaf burn - like in your photos.
So let me guess . . . the smaller plants are doing worse than the bigger plants, right? That's an easy way to tell nutrient burn versus deficiency. As a general rule, if the bigger plants are yellowing and the smaller plants are doing alright, you need to feed them more. If the smaller plants are yellow and the bigger plants are doing alright, you are feeding them too much.
In fact, seedlings don't need much food at all - they have all they need in their cotyledons (small round leaves) to get them through the first 1-2 weeks of their lives. When raising seedlings in coco, all you really need to do is pre-buffer and pre-ignite the coco with a very weak (1/4 strength) nutrient solution and then use plain water until they are almost two weeks old. Then you can start to feed them properly.
I'm also going to have another guess that the formula you are using is for RO water, right? Therefore the instructions likely call for a higher ratio (concentration) of nutrient than using tap water. Plus you're using cal-mag - which is high in nitrogen - and Liquid Karma - which also contains NPK (much too high K for seedlings, IMO). Altogether, you probably have no idea exactly how much of each nutrient is in your coco.
That Botanicare Pro Grow also looks like it has enough calcium and magnesium in it already, so I'm not sure why you're adding cal-mag at this stage - you should only really be using it to pre-ignite your coco and/or if you see signs of a deficiency.
Also, what sort of coco are you using? Has it been flushed and/or treated/pre-buffered? If it hasn't been flushed, it likely contains sea salt (coconut coir grows and is generally processed in coastal areas). If it's already been pre-buffered and treated, it likely already has nutrient in it. Either one can burn seedlings if you continue to feed them without flushing.
The real problem, though, is that you are adding nutrients and then drying out your pots, which increases the concentration of nutrients as the water evaporates - until all you're left with is a near-dry pot of coco full of dry salts. Add a bit of heat from your lighting to the equation - which causes your leaves to perspire and your pots to dry out even faster - and you quickly burn your little seedlings from the roots up (that's why they don't grow - burnt leaves are the least of your worries, as burned roots can't be seen and will stunt growth).
The solution is to flush all your plants with plain water and go easy on the nutrient. After thoroughly flushing, water them with a very week nutrient solution (1/4 strength; just the nutrient - no Liquid Karma, Cal-Mag or other stuff) and leave them to recover. Raise your lights a little bit to reduce heat stress, and they should start to grow out of it over the next few days to a week.
The #1 mistake all noobs make is overfertilising - I'd say it accounts for most of the plant problems I see on these boards.