Some of the F1 had rear disk brakes: not all, though.
All F-Models had a rear disc brake.
The later K7 sometimes came in black, and the K8 was mixed black and silver versions.
Only the F2 and F3 models came with black engines. The K-Models never did.
The valve guides of the post-1975 F and K engines are very short-lived
After 36 years and 210,000 miles, I finally replaced them. Short-lived? Not so sure.
Uh-oh, old fight back to life?
Wobbly: there's a beautiful, original 1975 F0 in my neck of the woods, perfectly preserved and recently brought back to the world of the 'riding' folks. It has no rear disc, and his dad was the original owner. It still has the original Candy Red color, in great condition! Build date is 2/75.
Last year I finished building a cafe' K7 bike that was owned by the original owner until he backed his pickup truck into it in 2008, after which it sat next to his garage in the weather until [this new owner] talked him out of it. It has a factory-black engine (now 836cc). Build date is 1/77.
Honda did many things like this in the day: my K2 is one of the first 800 K2 bikes imported to the US. It has a 100% K1 engine.
Your exceptional valve guide life is like O'freen's bike: he has an early F and it has over 140k miles on it with no special oil-burning issues. My own K1 head had Stellite guides in it with no valve seals, with the guides being just like the K0 guides, extra long. I just replaced them this summer at 140k miles, as they were worn just enough (about .0024") that I didn't think I would get another 150k out of them. Recently I met another fellow here on the forums who has a genuine F0 head with Stellite guides in it, so at some point Honda had gone back to the tougher stuff, at least for a while, after 1974.
This also was Honda's bent in those days: they often made early versions of the models with extra performance, which faded away as production increased. It seemed to have much to do with their intended quality, which suffered a little when their costs got out of hand: this was the explanation given in Sochiro's biography of the time.