When you actually look at your plants and put the charts aside, you can tune your waterings in accordance with feeding each time, less or more, always in small changes, always consistent.
People think that if they gave 0.8 ec for instance, it should only go up from there, no... like
@calvin.m16 said, salts will build up even at low doses and even when you allow runoff.
The best solution is to adjust everything beforehand to optimal conditions instead of chasing your own tail later on.
Roots don't like flactuations, flushing should take place only if you screwed things up beyond normal repair and as last resort.
The main problem is people get carried away, either in too much or too little without actually looking at the plants and understanding what is needed.
I always follow the plant, starting at my water starting point (usually 0.5 ec) and increase very slowly according to what the plants show me.
If I see over feeding, I know it's small above what was good, and I start to take it down also slowly until I reach again to a good condition.
Coco is subject to problems with salts, as most people just grow in dense grained coco which holds tight salts and even when giving less ec water, it still has a hard time getting rid of past salts in it..
A lot of factors going into play here,
That's why I always use ewc with my coco and adding salts very slowly after 1 month of growing.