You're talking about some loosely-related, but completely different things here. When you consider deleting a question that you've asked, you should be thinking only about the technical merits of the post:
- Are people tripping over this in searches and likely being disappointed?
- Could this be blocking someone from asking a much better version of essentially the same thing?
- Was I asking the wrong question altogether?
- Would time wasted by anyone that engaged with this question be minimal if it were deleted?
If you hit a 'yes' across the board there, then you might want to consider pruning it. Sometimes you set out to be brilliant and end up just making noise instead. This should not happen very often, and unless you strongly feel that the question is actively harmful in some manner, just leave it - we've got lots of space, don't worry.
Now - about question blocks. Deleted questions are considered when we calculate them, so deleting a question doesn't make it go away as far as how the system views the overall quality of your contributions. We don't just look at how many deleted questions you have, but also how frequently and recently you've deleted stuff. It's not a simple calculation that says "if more than [x] percent deleted then evil" - it's a sliding scale. To that, there's some very simple advice:
Favor editing and improving posts over deleting them, delete only when there's no way it can be salvaged and you just don't want the embarrassment.
Most users don't need to worry about that. What you do need to worry about is a moderator noticing that you're deleting quite a bit of content, and stepping in to ask you why. Remember, once you post it, it belongs to the entire community - and it's a moderator's job to protect it.
Occasionally deleting something that you feel is just not worth keeping around? That's not going to hurt you.