It's a boundary case IMHO. I would do it only if the question has the potential of becoming a great and useful question.
Usually I only ask the OP to do that themselves, because only then you have a guarantee that you won't make something against the intentions of the OP. You can also advise them to fix the question as a whole including new information.
It's true however, that most of the time they won't do it, and will just put the additional info at the bottom. In the example you've presented I think it wasn't bad (although as I've mentioned - I wouldn't do it). The problem was that it was obviously taken as changing the original meaning, as reviewers probably have missed your edit summary.
Side note: as mentioned by Deduplicator in the comments, "EDIT" markers are redundant and shouldn't be used. The whole post should be fixed, to include new information in a clear and readable way. The question is the most important, not its history.
EDIT:
, so it's not super easy to tell that you had copied it from the comments. You might want to mention that part next time ("Added more information based on OP in the comments"). – Kevin Brown Jan 17 '15 at 0:01