AS part of my 'advancing-age' I'm quite leery of getting down beside the bike's right side to see how the oil-level is (it DROPPED once when doing that, but I wasn't hurt, altho' my leg WAS trapped for a few minutes), so I worked on a solution when I did an oil-change just the day after hitting 100,000 miles.
I had my wife photograph the 'sight-gauge' while I balanced the bike from the LEFT, side-stand down, until the pic showed the level at the FULL line once I'd filled enough oil.
1-sidestand=fresh oil by Ed Copeman, on Flickr
Then I took a short ride (which ALWAYS makes the oil look black!), and reconfirmed w/ my wife that it STILL was even at the FULL line back in my shop, in the following pic.
2-sidestand=engine run a "bit" by Ed Copeman, on Flickr
THEN I put my TREX rear paddck-stand back under, and lifted the rear of the bike, got my camera and looked at 'WHERE FULL IS" when lifted.
3-on paddock-stand by Ed Copeman, on Flickr
NOW I can check my oil safely w/out needing another helper.
It's FULL when the oil-level is SLIGHTLY above the "MINIMUM OIL-LEVEL" line on the sight gauge!



I had my wife photograph the 'sight-gauge' while I balanced the bike from the LEFT, side-stand down, until the pic showed the level at the FULL line once I'd filled enough oil.

Then I took a short ride (which ALWAYS makes the oil look black!), and reconfirmed w/ my wife that it STILL was even at the FULL line back in my shop, in the following pic.

THEN I put my TREX rear paddck-stand back under, and lifted the rear of the bike, got my camera and looked at 'WHERE FULL IS" when lifted.

NOW I can check my oil safely w/out needing another helper.
It's FULL when the oil-level is SLIGHTLY above the "MINIMUM OIL-LEVEL" line on the sight gauge!