And that's what you recommend to anyone here in the Basic Scuba forum?
I have an IP tester and think I could probably use it correctly to check that. But, how do I validate the cracking pressure?
Really, the question is, how can I know that I checked my regs before the trip and they won't check out fine and then the first dive be the time they finally cross the line from "fine" to "not fine"? If they're going to freeflow, there's always going to be a first dive where they do it, right? So, if I'm just continuing to use them until I have a problem, how can I know that that first time won't just happen to be 15 dives into a weeklong liveaboard?
I'm not trying to be argumentative (though I realize it probably sounds like it). I'm trying to understand what the warning signs are that you can actually test for and how to do the relevant tests. All I've ever heard people talk about is checking the IP to make sure it's not creeping up. And maybe that's what my recent leak/freeflow situation was, so testing it the day before would have alerted me. But, maybe my 2nd stage (barely) hissing was from something in the 2nd stage itself (I will find out when I pick them up)? In which case, how would I test to learn that that was about to start happening during pre-trip checking? My question is supposing that the 2nd stage hasn't started leaking (audibly) yet, but would start during my hypothetical trip.
The point being to catch the problem before it starts in order to prevent the problem starting during a trip. If there is no way to actually catch it before it starts, then regular service, or carrying a complete spare setup, and/or learning how to do your own service and carrying a service kit seems like the only options to be sure you don't end up having to try and borrow or rent regs during a trip.
I have a feeling the answer is that IP creep is pretty much always the issue here and that you can detect it well before it gets bad enough to actually cause a problem. So, if you test before a trip and don't have any creep, then you can be pretty well assured that it won't start happening and get bad enough to cause a problem during even a week or two of heavy diving. If so, then cool and I have definitely learned something (about what I should be checking on my regs periodically).