edit: just saw the pics lol. water+light.
are you topping off with pH'd water without nutes every day? sometimes, my meter reads higher than the day before, but after i top off my system, ppm/ec actually went down. it could be the case that nutes are being absorbed, but water is also being absorbed and/or evaporated so that the concentration stays the same. try topping off your res before taking readings. also make sure your probe is clean and calibrated and always stored "wet." i store mine in the top-off water trash can, which is pH'd but has no nutes (low ppm/ec). i think most manufacturers recommend storing it in pH 4.0 calibration solution.
concentration or ppm is a ratio of "stuff" (number of particles) to water (per million water molecules). EC is essentially the same thing. pour a cup of salt in 5 gallons of water, then get an EC reading. pour in another 5 gallons of water, and the EC reading will go down, but that doesn't mean there is any less salt in the res.
higher ppm/ec isn't going to feed your plants any faster or make nutes any "more available" than a lower concentration. consider this: a 5 gallon bucket at 1200ppm has the exact same amount of nutrients as a 10 gallon res at 600ppm. system chemistry, including pH, is more stable with a larger res volume. plants absorb nutrients faster in a lower concentration than in a higher concentration because of a more favorable osmolar gradient.
if you're seeing deficiencies, it's not necessarily about just adding more NPK nutes. don't just blindly add more micro and bloom. you have to figure out what the plant is short on and make sure you feed it more of THAT nutrient. carefully diagnose the deficiency, then find the appropriate remedy.
try an endomyco product to revitalize your roots from the inside-out. healthier, beefier roots are going to absorb nutrients a lot better than thin, sad-looking roots.
if your plants aren't getting enough light, they're not going to do a whole lot. try adding more lights to increase the plants' NEED for nutrients. i think a lot of times, people sit there and split hairs, assuming the problem is the ph or ppm/ec or this micro nutrient or that macro nutrient or whatever. a lot of times, you just need to blast it with tons of light energy to get it going. internal chemistry of the plant is going to be fucked even with the "perfect" nutrient solution if you don't have enough light to provide the energy needed for tons of different reactions to occur.
hope some of this helps!