I know that there is (somewhere) a question that asks about how answers can be posted on a closed question, and it's due to a "grace" period. I would link it, but my Google-fu is failing me right now, so someone who doesn't fail please do edit it in.
My question, however, is how long is that "grace" period, and why does it only apply to some? I ask this as I, personally, have never been able to answer a closed question; I have never "benefited" from the "grace" period. Others, however, seem to be able to answer questions some time after the question is closed. For example, in this question's timeline you can see that user GMB is afforded almost 10 minutes (9 minutes 40 seconds) to answer it. (I want to clarify that I am not promoting users to vote on this question or related answers, which often happens when you link them on meta. This is just an example.)
I don't mind the grace period, though I personally think that if it does exist it should be consistent. There have been several times where I will be answering a question, and then I go to submit the answer and because I did so seconds (literally seconds) after the close vote completed my answer was rejected. Some of those answers I have put (significant) time into, and thus I then have to save off the Markdown content, vote to reopen, and then bookmark the question so that I can get the opportunity to answer. I'm pretty confident there's then been at least one example where someone else has posted an answer after I have previously been refused the "right".
If there is a grace period, then why does it only "benefit" some and not others? Why is it not even consistent for all users on a specific question? From a user experience perspective that isn't particularly "fair" (especially when you put effort into answering) and feels like the behaviour is more a "bug" (feature?) than by design.