maybe, combination of a hot soil and also coinciding cause of not letting rootzone dry out enough between irrigation? More than one thing happening here unless the odd leaf development is genetic. When nutes are out of balance or unusually high, pretty normal to get funky leaf growth or fewer fingers... here you see a lack of seration etc. If it grows out of it, chalk that part up to genetics.
sounds like you are choosing a volume and frequency out of the ether. that's not how you water. The plant and pot size dictates everything. You give what is required to get the job done. you only learn the volume to provide retroactively.
1) fully saturate -- whatever volume it takes to do this competently. If in soilless, also get a 10% or greater runoff. This is waste water that is no good for a potted plant. An outside garden or a drain is a good place for it.
2) wait for appropriate dry back -- this is where you have some control. If you consistently re-irrigate at same loss of water weight, it will require the same volume of water each time.
If deviating from this, you are doing it wrong. A good wet-dry cycle, especially early on, is integral to proper root development and lowers risk of pathogens. In general, you shoudl wait for soil to dry about 1" deep. Learn the weight of the 'dry' pot. Weight is an easier trigger. NEver let the plant wilt. That is waiting too long.
You can push frequency in flower if you want, but you still need at least 'some' dryback. in a soilless context 33% dryback is generally okay. In soil, you probably want a higher threshold.
If normal watering habits explained above ever cause droop, it is 100% the fault of how the soil is contituted. It needs more perlite or similar in such cases. Fully wetting teh pot should not drown the roots. That should take several minutes of over-watering to have such an effect with any competently constituted substrate... e.g. you water to runoff then continue to over-water for another 10minutes and droop is inevitable, lol.. but should not occur from basic irrigation.