When you crank a motor over does the battery drop to about 9 volts always? Or only if batteries are run down?
Depends on the size of the motor, the size of the starter the size of the battery cables, the cleanliness of the battery cables and connections, the size of the battery and the health of the battery.
for example, a big block will require about 200 Amps to turn the motor over with an in-rush current of about 400 amps. this instantaneously drops a healthy group 27 down to about 7 volts for about 10ms, and will stay at about 10 volts while cranking.
all storage batteries have a voltage drop when a large load is applied to them. the amount of voltage drop is based on the conditions at hand.
OP doesn't state what he has for a motor, what he has for a battery, the health of the battery or the cleanliness of the connections. he only states that the battery was a "little low". So I am going to assume a day of fishing and the battery is below 12 volts (fully discharged). then even an outboard will drop the voltage of a group 24 or a group 75 to under 9 volts when trying to start it.
add marginal battery connections and the voltage drop is even more significant.
either way, 12 volt electronics generally need more than 9 volts to function