Re: why 9.9hp and not 10hp
I believe Canadian law was the same -- ten horse and above you have to register. There's also some obscure regulation that states the manufacturer's power claims have to be within a certain pecentage of the actual output. Not sure what that number is but the margin of "error" allowed in the marine industry is far greater than the automotive. This gives the manufacturer more leeway to fiddle the numbers.
On a somewhat similar note, my 2004 Yamaha 90hp 4 stroke is -- I've heard -- actually a 100 hp motor. As told to me, there started to be a significant difference in insurance rates for 100 hp plus outboards a few years ago. Interestingly, about the same time Yamaha's line of 100 hp motors was discontinued. You can have 90 or 115 now...
Sure be nice to know for sure. Rodbolt -- can you comment?
Course for those shallow enough to care about such things, breaking the three digit hp rating on one's engine cover might be worth the extra insurance money. Then again, maybe Yamaha still sells the 100 hp decal set. For those that care, of course...
