I was trying to figure what the community, at large, feels about asking the reason for downvotes. Hence the question. The post didn't quite make it explicit but such comments usually come from relatively high rep users. I haven't run into newbies or even relatively newbie folks making comments like: Why was this downvoted?
I find it a bit surprising to see that an overwhelming proportion of folks feel that it's necessary or correct to ask for the downvote reason. Their reasons might vary, but most seem to suggest that it gives an opportunity to improve upon the answer. For a seasoned user posting an answer that is unlikely to help the OP1, regardless of whether incorrect or not, would not seem to be useful. Very often the unhelpful (or even incorrect) sort of answers emerge due to the Fastest Gun in the West Problem. If they are a bit careful to read the question before answering, there would be far lesser instances of downvotes.
Moreover, I cannot help wondering that nobody came out and argued that if one posting an answer would never ever ask or argue why her post was upvoted, then what sense does it make to ask for the downvote reasons. I have run into several several incorrect answers that have managed upvotes for whatever reasons and those are not removed despite possible comments suggesting that the answer is incorrect. (Somewhat related: Should answers that do not answer a question be preserved)
Some talk about the herd effect, note that it applies to upvotes too. Perhaps more often than in the other case because downvotes on answers cost a penny and only few are willing to shell it out. Yet one would never hear anyone (there may be exceptions) complain about being upvoted for an incorrect answer even if a brave soul comes out and comments about it.
Aside from what others have mentioned who don't quite find such comments to be constructive, I'd say that such comments do indicate that one is attempting to say that I can never go wrong. It doesn't seem give a very good feeling -- one might go wrong regardless of reputation or experience or whatever. Perhaps reading the question and one's own answer before hitting Post Your Answer would reduce the opportunity to ask the question drastically.
1 It's not quite hard to figure that. The question would tell a lot about how one needs to answer so that it's useful to the OP. If the question is terribly vague, then it doesn't deserve an answer anyways.
Does leaving a comment for a wrong answer make any sense?
I'm not sure. A number of incidents appear to suggest that it is best to downvote and move on.
Reason: I've often observed that leaving a note to indicate that the answer is wrong often leads to snippets from an existing correct answer to the same question being blatantly copied into one's own answer. (This would invariably happen if the incorrect answer has managed upvotes.)
Moreover, there are some who wouldn't even prefer it to be obvious that that an incorrect answer was fixed using other answers. As such, they would even flag such comments as obsolete after having utilized the creative commons advantage.
Moreover, if people don't expect to be a given a reason for upvotes then asking reasons for downvotes appears to be highly irrational.