You're focusing on the wrong group.
100% of people who can leave thank you comments, provided they're not OP of the question or the answer it's posted on, can also vote. The comment privilege is unlocked at 50 rep. Upvoting is unlocked at 15.
In the comments on a different post, Catija pointed out something we already knew, and have known for a long time; lots of people don't vote, even if the post helps. Do you maybe now see where the problem is?
People aren't properly educated on how to use the site. That's why we're getting tons of NAAs and off-topic questions - the systems aren't good enough to properly educate the good-faith posters, the people who look at posts and then don't vote, even if it helps. Adding a thanks feature only risks distracting from votes. To quote the tour:
Good answers are voted up and rise to the top.
The best answers show up first so that they are always easy to find.
What about posts with 3000 thanks, but has 2 upvotes and has been locked there for a few years? Is that good or bad?
By further distracting from the already semi-forgotten-about voting system, people risk getting less and less rep. Personally, I don't care. I have well over 20000 rep, and got all the privileges of any importance that can be gained through rep.
And before I end this section, as I said, most people who write "thank you" comments also have access to voting. Why do you think they write "thanks" comments instead of upvoting?
I actually have no idea, but that's an idea of something to look into, instead of focusing on a parallel voting feature that likely will end up being ignored and result in no fewer "thank you" comments.
You're screwing new users instead.
Everyone on this site had 1 or 101 rep (association bonus) at some point. How are you going to explain to new users that they're not getting rep because people are thanking too much instead of voting? And how are you going to deal with the site systems when users are struggling even more to get rep?
I'm concerned about new users who want to make contributions to the site. I'm concerned about the users who have just unlocked their first queues and would like to do more. This change risks turning away future moderators because they can't get enough rep. This has several horrible effects thanks to previous issues thanks to your (= Stack Overflow, to be clear, not the announcer. I try not shooting the messengers) actions.
We're already losing core users to Codidact, Topanswers, other sites, other services, or just outright leaving without a "replacement". If you push away future mods now by denying them rep needed for privileges, the only thing you'll get is Spam Overflow. 20000 thanks means absolutely nothing if you're still stuck at 553 rep, but want to contribute towards moderation of the site.
Admittedly, it was already bad, and it's hard getting upvotes. Some tags have different voting cultures as well, but adding a rep-less "thanks" feature isn't going to help. Stop wasting your time and focus on what really matters. The problem isn't that users can't upvote, it's that they're not getting the proper introduction to the site. 15 rep is relatively easy to get, and it's even possible to get without posting (through suggested edits).
On one hand, you claim the reason for this is comments, but also that it's to help new users interact with the site. The problem is that you can also get users who now focus on that button instead of upvoting. People already don't know about the accept feature in spite of it being outlined in the tour.
We also get posts here on meta on a somewhat regular basis complaining about downvotes, and how downvote feedback should be mandatory. Some of these also directly state they feel insulted by the downvotes. We've been over that topic so many times, and stated that downvotes aren't personal. People don't get the message. Adding another feature means another thing to keep in mind, and another thing to teach users about. If you can't get people to understand and properly use the existing features, that is NOT a sign you should add another parallel feature - that's a sign you need to add more documentation, and get people to understand the site.
I still agree some things need to change in the voting area, but this is not it. Instead of helping with the vote issue, you're solving a different problem that can easily be solved by motivated users, and making the vote issue worse. If you want to solve the "thanks" comment problem, focus on the comments, NOT how to best distract users by giving them alternatives.
The alternative to posting a "thanks" comment is upvoting. If you also introduce thanking, which is a meaningless gesture the way it's implemented, there's now two alternatives to "thanks" comments. If you don't document them, most users won't use it anyway, and keep posting "thanks" comments.
This feature is available to all registered users, regardless of reputation (unlike voting, which is only available for users with 15 reputation or more).
Voting has always been available to everyone. Only those with 15 or more rep change the score and award rep. Upvotes and downvotes without enough rep is still stored, and the resulting score is shown to 10k users. From a rep point of view, both these features are equally useless. They don't give rep, they don't notify the poster, and the gesture is equally empty. A general sense of satisfaction doesn't grant moderation privileges.
Your statistics are wrong
We discovered that “thanks” appears in 1 of 6 comments left under answers
Thank you for pointing that out. See what I did there?
People use "thanks" in different forms for all kinds of things. Here's one random example I just made up:
Thanks, but this doesn't address the issue. <400 more characters explaining why>
That isn't a "thank you" comment even if it contains "thanks". Some people also use "thanks" as a salutation, and some times, people talk meta about "thanks" in comments on main.
In summary,
This feature will most likely result in:
- Less voting (thanking doesn't count as a vote)
- Less rep growth
- Fewer users who can get the rep to become a core user
- Couple arbitary time units down: more spam, less moderation on the site. All hail Spam Overflow
- Wasted time on a feature that has no impact on the biggest problems the site faces
- No decrease in "thanks" comments
- Increase in duplicates to this question on meta
- Increased confusion
... instead of educating users on how the site works, increasing voting, and reducing the moderator workload.
Bhargav has done a fantastic job on dealing with NAAs, but how much time do you think goes into that? I have a SEDE query that tracked down regex-matches "thank you" comments with a very high precision. Those don't hit the moderator workload - the hundreds of NAA answers posted on the site daily, however, do.
I also flagged a lot of NAAs until I decided to stop in protest of SE's actions. One of the things I often saw was "I'm new, I didn't know I couldn't post a question as an answer" (intent-wise - not a direct quote because there were a lot of comments like that). Here's a selection of 100 comments containing "new to stackoverflow" (slowpoke DB; getting more rows causes slow results or a timeout).
I have no idea what scale comments asking about site features are on, but there are a lot. That is a problem - not being able to thank people without 15 rep isn't in comparison.
Around the time the ask question wizard was made, someone somewhere suggested an answering wizard, with the intent of cutting down NAAs and improving answer quality. That was ignored and never implemented. The answering experience, compared to the asking experience, is horrible.
While I'm trying to stress how important educating new users is, let's go back to voting; people seeing downvotes as unwelcoming can lead to them viewing the entire site as unwelcoming. If you properly teach people that downvotes aren't personal, and that they don't mean "this post is bad, and you should feel bad about yourself", you reduce some of it.
To draw a bit of a parallel, the first time you join a site or look at something, it can be terrifying. It's like a complicated game - the first time you look at it and get started, nothing makes sense or has any form of logic. When you get used to it, and learn how it works (for instance through a tutorial), it doesn't seem as horrible. Stack Overflow is the game. The tutorial is the thing you neglected to implement properly. The end result is what you're not getting.
Stack has problems, and they need to be fixed. This "feature" doesn't help.
"+1"
comments? We'll go with it and see with where it goes...