The "standards" are the same. But there are different voting patterns, as there are differences in voting patterns between any two parts of the site.
Voting culture not only varies from meta to the main site, it varies from tag community to tag community. But even within communities you will find different voting standards for different kinds of questions, and even for the same tag and the same kind of question you willl find variance.
Because in the end it comes to this:
Nevermind the meta is different spiel, the only guidance that really, really matters are the tooltips for the voting buttons.
Voting is an expression of a personal opinion: if a user finds a post useful, clear, and well researched; they can upvote. The opposite to any of these things? They can downvote.
As long as they are not engaging in voting fraud (part of a voting ring, targeting a user, etc.) all votes are legitimate (that's a concern you raised in a comment to me earlier on).
On meta voting patterns are logically different: there are less posts per user, and a more liberal attitude regarding votes. Since they do not impact reputation in any way, users are liable to use them more freely. Note that not only you've got more downvotes than you usually have in your posts in main: you also had more upvotes than you normally get. That's meta for you, more votes all around. A post receiving dozens of votes (up or down) is not unusual here, where it's the exception in main.
Instead of trying to divine the voting culture that justified the downvotes to your posts, you should just think that someone thought that that your post wasn't all that great. It's always a good excercise. If you really can't find anything wrong with your post... well, think harder. There are always things that other users may object.
Trying to imagine those is a great way to improve.
As a practical example:
I've got a downvote (so far) to the answer to the question you linked. I have no way to really know what the downvoter actually thought, and I do think my post is OK and should be useful to you and hopefully someone else, but some other user thought that it wasn't.
- Maybe they thought I didn't link to any documentation to back-up my claims.
- Maybe they thought I didn't have enough authority to answer something that could be classed as a bug
- Maybe they thought that my thoughts about the post being classified as either a bug or a FR weren't really useful.
Etc, etc, etc. I could go on. I could use all these speculation on the reasons for a single downvote to improve this post, or maybe to post better posts in the future.
A similar excercise will probably be needed when I get downvotes on this answer. So we learn and grow.