I rarely get involved in this topic/discussion anymore, but a few thoughts.
Nearly every one of the people to contact me the past five years regarding oil pressure and the oring have had the oring bubbled out when the running pressure was in the 25+/-range, or below 30lb when at 4k rpm, 5th gear, hot engine, in general. If the oring is bubbled out, then oil just has to be backflowing into the sump. For those that like oil backflowing, let it happen, for those that do not, find a fix that you like. NO, NO, NO, Yamaha has not fixed the oring issue or delivery elbow, nor are they going too, nor are they going to admit to anything. Yes, both small and large orings can bubble out, but the smaller orange oring is much less likely to get caught. Yes, the round top or flat top elbow will both let the oring get caught. I have not found, nor received a report of the Kaw Oval ring getting caught, yet. I have not found, nor received a report that convinces me any of the other fixes including the hangers or hard wiring the elbow in place is a 'perfect' solution. So each is on his own regarding what works/does not work, to ignore or check or try a fix. My opinion, although constantly open for change remains, that the oring is an issue, a pressure gauge is needed, monitoring/study is imporant. And yes, there has been catastrophic to partial engine damage, probably on a lot more bikes than anyone really knows/understands. No, every bike does not have an oring bubbled out, but the percentage, although unknown, is likely much higher than once thought.
My advice is usually, if a gauge is installed, take the Max out for a good long run of 15-20+ miles where it can heat up as fully as possible. Check the pressure reading at 4k rpm while running down the road in 5th gear. The bench mark seems to be 35-40lb at 4k rpm, 5th gear, when hot. Try not to idle the bike any more than necessary as low rpm's are just plain hard
on the oil flow. Warm up on the go by controlling acceleration/rpm's as much as possible. The water temp
gauge is NOT a good indicator of a warm engine. When the pressure drops back out of the 60-70lb cold range,
that is a good indicator the engine is starting to be at operating temp and the point where it can be monitored
and also run normal/harder.
Do not be concerned about any other pressure except the hot running pressure at 4k rpm in 5th gear running down
the highway. Use that as a 'marker' that you can easily remember to monitor consistently. If that pressure seems low
then you need to open the sump and look at the orange oring as it will likely be bubbled out of position. If you are one of those people that believe a bubble oring is not an issue, then nothing to worry about. If you carefully warm up the engine on the go, the high start-up pressure is not an issue. Many advise the high start up pressure is the reason for the oring to be bubble out. Perhaps, but I tend to feel the up/down movement of the elbow in the case channel is the primary reason, letting the oring fall into the beveled area and not being able to slide back into the normal channel position, thus remaining bubbled out. That is the reason the big/fat orange ring is being caught at a much higher frequency than the smaller orange or Kaw oval ring. If you do not idle any more than absolutely necessary then the low idle pressure (5-8 lb) is not an issue. Low pressure of 25+/- on a hot engine at 4k rpm in 5th gear is an issue, IMO.