I'd been watering significantly less than 1" per week. I have thinned to one plant every 12", in rows 3' apart, and my plants are currently about 3' tall, or approximately stage VE7.
Last week a few of my plants looked a little dry, and the top 3-4" of soil was dry to the touch, so I left my drip hose on for an hour, which should provide about 1/3 of an inch, if my math is correct (1 GPH every 18" on each hose, and the hoses are set 3' apart).
Then the next morning I dug down in a spot that didn't have a corn plant, and it was very wet all the way down to a foot or more.

I have very heavy clay soil. I till manure into the top layer as far down as my tiller will go, but it won't go down a foot.
I've turned off the watering to let it dry out a bit over the last 3 days, and the plants do not show any signs of overwatering, but now I'm curious about how to monitor soil moisture way below the surface.
I'm a bit skeptical about a regular soil temp/moisture probe, because those measure just at the tip, and I'm not sure how accurate it will be if I'm attempting to take multiple readings while moving it up and down through 6 - 24" of soil.
One option would be to buy a much more expensive soil sampling probe, pull up a series of samples every 6", and lay them out for inspection.
How does everyone else do this? Or do you just watch the plants and react accordingly?