Looking at many questions like just sorting "all questions" by votes it seems to me like many answers gain - at least slightly - more up-votes than question itself (however, I did not take a look at if there were many down-votes for a question just the total).
And if not a single answer then there are usually many answers having lots of up-votes so if assuming that not so many voters up-vote 2 or three answers there are more distinct up-voters to answers.
Of course I realize that there could be a bad / wrongly asked question with an excellent answer but maybe not so many?
Can some statistic guru provide some proof to support/not support my assumption which is:
There are more distinct up-voters for answers than for questions for those answers?
Or is this actually impossible since voting should be closed so without knowing voter identity distinction can not be made?
In that case maybe some statistics about Q&A where there is just a single answer having top count of votes, maybe?