Andyf wrote:ain't volt-drop a quadratic equation?
(like I've got a frkin clue

)
The voltage at the beginning of the circuit is full voltage (whatever that is) but that voltage has dropped at the end of the circuit (at The Bulbs) due to bad connections (electrical resistance)
There is more voltage ( 12v ) available so less voltage drop along the circuit to the bulbs, I think that's what's being implied.
We were taught that volts is the force or pressure that pushes the electricity along a circuit, the higher the volts the greater the pressure.
If you think about the ignition spark then the wattage is very low probably no more than 25 watts maximum. But the high voltage gained by using a HT coil to raise the voltage in that circuit to many thousands of Volts and causes a spark to jump through an air gap to make the engine run.
If the voltage was low as it is in a lighting circuit then there would be no ignition spark.