I like the idea generally, but have one suggestion for smoothing over some of the rough edges:
When the automatic deletion action is triggered, notify the asker and give them a window of time during which they may "rescue" (undelete) their question by offering a bounty.
This will tend to protect established/trusted users who feel their worthy question fell victim to bad luck or targeted abuse. It imposes a cost on the asker to save their question - they have to think, Is this question really worth it?
- Drive-by users are unlikely to ever see the notification.
- Very low-rep users who, 30+ days after asking their question, still don't have bounty privileges may or may not be motivated to earn the necessary reputation to save their question before it gets eaten.
The more established the asker (in rep terms), the less likely that the cost of a bounty will be meaningful; still, offering a bounty implies some amount of buttons to press and additional curation responsibility. The truly lazy asker will consider this cost to be higher than the rep cost. Or, if it's anticipated that most users would simply "pay the tax" to keep their questions alive, the cost could be fixed at some value above the standard 50-rep minimum.
At the very least, many users would be appreciative of a pingmany users would be appreciative of a ping before their question is eaten. Perhaps there's some crucial detail they forgot, some unresolved comment they missed, some quality answer they neglected to upvote. Of course, incentives should still be geared toward getting it right earlier rather than later, so once the automatic deletion action is triggered, a bounty should be the only way out, and there should definitely be a limited window of opportunity - e.g., within 72 hours of deletion, or 24 hours of viewing the notification. Whatever's easier.
The only thing I wonder is whether the increased visibility of questions that are "rescued" to the featured tab would tend to have an across-the-board upvote effect, saving borderline questions even they continue to stagnate. But even if this is the case, maybe the small participatory (and StackExchange™ MegaPoints RepuScore™...atory) investment made by the asker is worthy of a stay of execution.