The hope to be a good editor for the right reasons, rather than just having 2,000+ reputation, is commendable.
The probable flaw in the idea is the presumed expectation that the Edit Review queue has output related to "Review" rather than "Look at all my shiny badges and how fast I got them! Aren't I cool?" to help you achieve the aim of being a reliably good editor.
Although there is a substantial improvement to that queue with the "locking" of a review for a short period of time, it is still the case in my experience that the so-called Robo-reviewers are pretty effective at creating farce.
If concerned that your edit may not be up to scratch, do more research first.
Take the time that you'd spend editing for a week, and spend that itself looking at the top reviewers, and the reviews they have made.
Look first at a load of Accepts. Then look at a load of Rejects. Then look at a mix. If you can agree on the reject/accept say seven times out of 10, then you probably should be confident enough to do your edits without explicit "review". If you disagree too often, it probably means you need more research to get yourself "in synch" and then have the confidence to edit.
Remember also that there is a big difference in opinion between how exactly an edit should be made which is entirely unrelated to how an edit would be reviewed.
If you can make a post clearer, feel free to do so. Try to hit everything in that post that you can, with the emphasis on making it clearer. It is not a problem if someone else further improves the post later. If someone edits later and makes a mess of it, feel free to Rollback to your edit.
It's great that you want to do a better job of editing. I just don't think putting your edits through the Edit Review system would aid you as much as doing the research yourself would.