Cycle News

Cycle News 2025 Issue 35 September 3

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/1539081

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VOLUME ISSUE SEPTEMBER , P137 find some power in the low end, before finally realizing that they were chasing their own tails. "Back down at sea level, we found that the low-end lack wasn't brought on by the altitude. It just wasn't there. It was missed when plonking up hills or trying to get the front wheel up over obstacles at low speed." Meanwhile, the KX250 was earning high praise from the crew, even suggesting that the production machine "may be the best competition dirt bike ever to come out of Japan. Sounds hard to believe after the Honda Elsinore and the Yamaha YZ250, but the Kawasaki seems more rideable and easier to maintain than either of the other brands." Electronic ignition was a rela - tively new thing for motorcycles in 1974, so the fact that the KX's CDI worked well was worthy of a men- tion from the staff. The 34mm Mi- kuni was responsive throughout and the powerband was steady— no flat spots. "Throttle response is A-1 all the time from any place in the rev range. It seems what Kawasaki has done is design an engine for motocross from scratch, with very little ancestry attributable to the F-11 of yore…" There it is again—the com - parison. The KX is, of course, a nearly perfect machine and not at all like its slacker brother. "The Kawasaki F-11 enduro will puzzle you if you've ridden its motocross counterpart," CN wrote. The KX had great low-end throttle response, "which seems so noticeably lacking in the F-11." The rear suspenders on the F-11 bottomed out and wore out. The forks were fine, the tires were a compromise, "excel[ling] in neither area [street or dirt]. On the street, the F-11 could reach 80 mph, more than what was needed during the gas crunch era of the 1970s, which led to the introduction of the 55 mph speed limit, even on major highways and interstates. Motorcycling needed bikes like the F-11, along with the Suzuki TS models and Yamaha's DT lineup. They were simple, fun and ver - satile motorcycles, and they did everything okay, though nothing very well. The F-11's faults were inherent. Magazine staffers were relentless. The two Kawasaki 250s might've come from the same family, but that's where the similarity ends. One excelled at its designated purpose. The other predictably failed to do what was an impossible job—do everything right and do it at a high level. Remus was killed and Romu - lus founded Rome. Cain slew Abel and Marcia Brady dated the big man on campus, while a crazed Jan conjured up an imaginary boyfriend who even called her on the telephone. The KX250 is still around, albeit in four-stroke form. The F-11 was last seen being ridden by George Glass. CN Subscribe to nearly 60 years of Cycle News Archive issues: www.CycleNews.com/Archives The F-11 didn't meet the high expectations of the KX250, but it did get the CN staff to the Rocky Mountains and back. Try that on the KX250. Cycle News reviewed the 1974 Kawasaki F-11, the street-legal dual-sport off-roader, in the same issue, and we couldn't help but, perhaps unfairly, compare it to the KX250.

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