i wouldnt trust a 2 cent piece of plastic from china to make sure you have enough oil in there. just cut it and check from the dipstick.
Bingo! The "Low Oil" sensor circuit was created for the sole use of village idiots- contractors to be specific. Guys that really don't give a burnin' rat's rearend what is or is not inside the engine, or even if it works that day. We have a few guys like that on staff, makes me crazy. They figure that "Since
I didn't pay for this generator..." Anyways (he says, sidestepping a snowballing rant)
We here at DIY have absolutely no excuses. Fill your 'case with an appropriate oil, check your oil level regularly, change it according to good maintenance practises.
Having a "Low Oil" sensor just causes complacency. And technology, frankly, sometimes sucks. I despise the fact that the world relies on anti-lock brakes to the point where if the system fails in a panic stop, 99+% of drivers will get into a 4-wheel lockup and crash because
we rely too heavily on technology. (Oops- I must be in a ranting mood...)
Anyways- back to the topic (again). Just stay on top of it, and you're fine.
I don't know what decides how sensitive the sensor is- But I thrashed the daylights out of my kart on very rough terrain with my GX340's oil sensor still intact. I can count on one hand the number of times my ingition was interrupted in three years of driving it.