In your example, the deletion & undeletion is only part of the story. You said you improved it, which means the answer that was accepted wasn't really the answer you undeleted.
Now, what if you never deleted your answer and just improved it after the bounty was posted? Would you expect the system judge your post as new and hence qualifying for the automatic award? How much of an edit is necessary for the system to judge it as new?
The way the bounty system is designed is automatic award is based on a series of assumptions. The first major assumption the system makes is if any existing answer was good enough, the bounty would not have been needed. That is why existing answers are exempt from the automatic award - but it doesn't stop the bounty offerer from manually awarding the bounty.
The fact that you deleted it is immaterial. It existed before. The system then assumes that your answer wasn't good enough (and possibly why you deleted it in the first place), so automatically awarding to that answer would be against the wishes of the user who placed the bounty to begin with.
Now, editing the answer is a different story, but also makes it impossible to judge from an auto-award perspective. You edited your answer significantly enough by your own admission that maybe it could have been a different answer.
- But what about someone who adds a few characters? Should that reset the bounty status? How many characters is enough to make it a good edit vs just a small change?
- What if the small change is significant enough to change the answer completely?
- What if someone makes a significant (but mostly irrelavant) edit? Should that count?
- What if someone else makes the edit?
Allowing the edit to reset the bounty status and make additional assumptions about the nature of the change to automatically award a bounty. That seems to violate the primary assumption to not auto-award the bounty to an answer that the user who offered the bounty did not want to award it too.