I think this is a good plan as long as outline point 5 (SE monitoring for crap) is taken seriously and done effectively. This will be critical.†
I think the vote threshold should simply be either >0 or >=0 (undecided). That is, the requirements are non-closed, non-deleted, and non-poorly-received. Anything higher than 0 I feel will incentivize voting rings like you say (or if not full on voting rings, even just small things like going into chat and saying "vote for my post").
† I think the rules for handling duplicate questions should be fleshed out ahead of time, though. Tim B's answerTim B's answer raises a good point in that I think we could expect to see people asking questions without care of what others may have asked. Duplicates would have to be handled quickly - the longer they stay open, the more answers they attract, and this leads to potentially more work merging questions. The problem is if two users legitimately have the same good question around the same time (which might be reasonable to expect for a new product near the start of a trial), closing one as a duplicate of the other could potentially lead to some bad blood. I do not have any good ideas how to handle this, other than handling it case-by-case outside of the system.
The handling of duplicate answers is also going to be tricky, as typically nothing is really done about duplicate answers. It would be fairly easy to squeeze out a few extra raffle entries by simply posting the same answer that somebody else just posted, worded slightly differently. Of course, if everybody does this, maybe the proportions of raffle entries in the end won't be changed much, but that's too much math for me.
SE staff would also have to pay special attention to cases where a user posts an answer and down-votes all other correct answers on that question.