While I haven't tried it at 12 volts, years ago I used the Mauser part locator - filter on their website to find decent MOSFET's for RF applications. It might work to find a replacement for the ERF-9530
The trick was using this filter to select package style, dissipation, VDD, and most important, the turn on and turn off times of the device. That determines the upper frequency limits.
To get those numbers I just looked at another well-known RF MOSFET, rated to 30 MHz. Then set the filter on the Mauser website to be equal to or less than those numbers . As long as the gate input capacitance is below 3,000 pf, it's still relatively simple to match it to 50 ohms at this frequency. The gate capacitance of an inexpensive switch mode transistor can be much higher than a quality linear rated RF transistor.
Just about all of the inexpensive transistors that will work to 30 MHz, will be rated for nonlinear operation with no bias. With gate turn on voltages of approximately 4 volts, running an unbiased amplifier with these types of transistors, doesn't even work well on AM. They require bias and as soon as you start adding it, the published dissipation ratings drop to about 25%.
I've seen parts used at much higher voltages, that were rated for 500 watts dissipation in class C or below, only safely handle about 125 watts in class B. Many fell apart in class AB, without accurate thermal tracking on the bias.
The problem is Class B still leaves some "crunchy" in the audio of sideband signals. The more bias you apply to correct this problem, the more unreliable the amplifier becomes, due to Thermal Runaway.
What I can say about amplifiers using these types of transistors, is you get what you pay for. They are relatively low quality and while that doesn't always show up in the sound of the signal, it is definitely in the reliability of the equipment. With that in mind, don't pay a lot for low quality. I think you'll get the same bang for less buck, out of something like an RM Italy.
I also wouldn't buy anything rated for more than about 250 watts PEP. Otherwise, you're going to have too many little transistors all trying to act in balance as one big one. Internal drivers on these amplifiers, can also be problematic. They rarely provide enough decoupling between the two stages, to keep them stable under all conditions.