Meanwhile, the popular answer that people don't want to downvote will sit at the topMeanwhile, the popular answer that people don't want to downvote will sit at the top even in Trending sort, such that it takes more effort to even consider a potentially superior answer. (People who want to curate the site really need to get in the habit of sorting by newest.)
Seriously. There have been many times I personally found myself wondering aloud at how such and such an inferior answer could have gotten such a positive response, downvoted it as is appropriate - and then clicked to expand the total to find that I was the firstfirst downvoter on something with a triple-digit score. In years. Sometimes when the answer had a blatant problem that couldn't be fixed without violating even my standard of author intent.
Finally: the Trending sort has has no concept ofno concept of "as of YYYY-MM-DD, version X.Y is officially no longer supported, even for security fixes, and feature F is not possible in any newer version". It assumes that time can be treated as a continuous, constant-rate quantity, which is just not how the software world works.
As a consequence of the above issues, there's just way too much inertia in the system. It's not reasonable to expect to fix thisnot reasonable to expect to fix this mess with the "just post a new, better answer" approach.