NozBzh,
I have to tell you, and I don't mean to offend, but you're scaring me a little here. I'm not sure you want to dive that reg at all.
I first rotated the HP seat, but when I turned the air on it was leaking like crazy so I quickly turned the air off and put it back in its original position.
Rotating the seat should involve almost no change in any sealing component. The HP sealing oring around the seat should slide easily during this maneuver. "Leaking like crazy" (from where not specified) makes me think that you have a high pressure leak around this oring, since that is the only component that should have moved during this adjustment. But whether it is the oring or a scratch in the body where the seat seals is not clear. See this next:
When I tested it again, it was leaking from the top (where you adjust the IP) and still whistling. I then tightened the screw that adjusts the IP, it was still leaking but the whistling was gone. I opened the top part again, took out the IP screw completely and put it back together. This time no leaking or whistling!
With adjustment of the cap and IP screw, you are theoretically changing where the HP seat sits in the body. You didn't specify whether you set your IP back to where it was before this started.
I remember when I started to have the whistling problem if I loosened up the top of the reg to the point where there was a slight leak, the whistling would stop. As soon as I tightened it again the whistling would resume.
This kind of maneuver is very dangerous. It means you are letting the HP seat rise in the body to a position where air is leaking around the oring. I don't know how you obtained a reasonable IP with this, but I would never let the HP seat cap sit loose in the body.
Thinking off the top of my head, there are only three dynamic spots in this regulator where it can leak (I may have missed another):
1) HP seat oring (or adjacent body scratch): high pressure leak from IP adjustment cap - dangerous
2) HP piston shaft oring (red stripe oring): high pressure leak from ambient holes - not good if something is chewing up the oring. Potentially catastrophic.
3) Piston head leak at oring or scratch inside the piston cap - again air from ambient holes. Probably not catastrophic, but wastes air and frightens people.
The whistling sounds to me like a issue with your HP seat position or shape, or the underlying spring. I say this based upon your previous maneuver of loosening the seat cap, because if you are setting the IP back to its original pressure, then the HP seat should be pushed to its original position by the hex screw, no matter whether the cap is tight or loose. And that leads me back to a possible scratch inside the body where the HP seat and oring seal.
I'd really recommend that you have a Scubapro guy familiar with this reg take it apart for a close inspection. A parts change without a logical sequence as you track down your two issues is just asking for trouble.
Again, sorry if I offend with my comments, but I'm concerned for your safety if you dive this reg.