Your regs don't work below 200 psi...take that out of your equation
A good quality balanced regulator will suck the tank down to just about zero.
An unbalanced first and second will start to struggle once the pressure gets close to the IP - about 150 psi or so.
Where it gets dicey is the SPG. With some you will still have 100-200 psi left in the tank when the needle hits the peg, and with others zero may really be very close to zero. SPG's that read more than zero when unpressurized are easy to spot so they never leave the factory that way - but you need to check them now and then as an SPG that is 200 psi conservative on the low end of the scale may end up the other way over time.
In general an SPG is most accurate in the middle of the range but 100-200 psi errors on both ends of the range can happen. Most cave divers own several and can cross check them all at high, mid and low pressures, and then weed out the ones more than 50 psi off from the others.
But Richard is correct as unless you have not breathed a tank down to nothing and confirmed the accuracy of the SPG and the effectiveness of the reg at low pressure, you really can't rely on having that last 200 psi of gas.
yes they do, I tried it they worked fine with no discernable breathing effort, dive rite balanced rg 2500's aka rg3000 all they way down till my guage was pretty much pegged on 0
All your statement really says is that your reg breathed the tank down unitl the needle was almost on 0.
The important question is was there any pressure left in the tank? If there was still 100-200 psi in the tank, then that represents unusable gas you can't plan on.
Also, if the SPG was "almost" on zero, does that mean it reads 50-100 psi high? If so then it is telling you that you have more gas than you really do and it again represents unusable gas you cannot lan on.
Ideally the gauge reads zero when the reg stops delivering and when you take the reg off and crack the valve virtually no pressure remains.