Back in the early 80's used to do a bit of trail riding with some blokes from work. The father of one one of the blokes (he was 47, so old to be riding dirt bikes i thought!!!) turned up with this weird 250 Kawasaki MX bike that he'd apparently bought from a used car yard. Non of us really knew what model it was, had a green plastic tank, an underslung chamber which swept up at the back with a sort of cone shaped silencer which flaired outward at the back and went like the clappers. The outer cases were sand cast, which I thought was unusual. After a few reliable years it was eventully sold off to a young relative of his. As I was getting interested in VMX in the early 90's I tried to track it down only to be told it had been trashed. I've yet to see another like it, but I'm guessing it must have been an F11M.
Thats a very good description of what the F11M looked like. Tho I don't think the outer cases were sandcast, they were special castings & flyweight. The whole bike was flyweight. I'd say it definitely was an F11M.
Kawasaki never had the PR machine of Yam or Honda w their associated 'spin doctors', or a dealer in every town, & unfortunately their race-efforts were often half-hearted, so the F11M never had the circulation of the Elsinore or the mistique of the RH or YZ a/b but it was a mighty fine MX bike in 73. It was easily the equal of an Elsinore & far & away better than the TM & MX. Tho down a little in peak power to the Elsie it had much better MX power, was lighter & didn't have the handling/cornering quirks of the Elsie or its gearbox troubles. It was only produced in 73 & in Kaw's scheme of things it was only ever a stop-gap model till the 74KX came out (which was practically a production 'RH' & almost as rare). The "F11M" moniker didn't help its mistique as people too often associated it w a modified trailie. Nor did its drab colour scheme (pale green & black, black & more black) or Kaw's pre-occuaption w the big-bore class in US help its cause
The F11 trailie actually came out in 72 & sold very well, esp in the early years, so it was hardly too little too late. Nor is $50 more than $790 a 15% disadvantage! (More like 5%)