Honda for me
I don't know what size boat you have, but for my '81 H25 I chose a Honda 9.9 high-thrust extra-long shaft electric start. Reasons:Electric start is pure joy. No white knuckles when maneuvering in tight quarters-- motors only seem to stall when coming into the docks in high winds, and that's no time to be turning around to yank frantically on a rope. And the closer you get to other boats, the more yanks they take to restart. I had a Honda 5 long shaft, but it was far too difficult to reach the starter rope because of the sternrail and backstay and because the powerhead sat so low when the motor was down in the water. My wife has never even tried rope-starting, because she can't swim, and she ain't going to lean over the stern. She can't sail, either, so if I fall overboard she needs electric start or I'll be swimming for shore while my family and vessel drift helplessly out of control.The extra long shaft helps keeps the prop from kissing the air if the water gets too lumpy. High thrust keeps a heavily laden boat moving in high head winds and seas.I like system redundancy. The Honda has BOTH electric and rope start. Most other manufacturers delete the rope start on their electric start engines. Batteries die. I want a back up.Honda controls are all mounted on the extra long tiller: start/kill, forward/reverse, throttle. This means no distractions when docking-- one hand on the boat tiller, one on the engine tiller and both eyes facing forward. The long tiller also makes it easy to steer with both the rudder and motor in tight quarters.I've found over the years that I sail more when it's easy to get in and out of harbor. If I'm worried about the motor not starting or idling properly, I make excuses for not heading offshore. Every day becomes a "maintenance day". Pick the engine that is ergonomically correct for you and your boat, and you'll be much happier.