If your coworker came to you with the same question, how would you respond to them? You might choose to tell them, "sorry, I have an idea about this, but I'm not confident in my experience."
I'd equate that with a comment. You don't want to be the definitive source, but you very much want to contribute, because you honestly believe it would be helpful. Over time, you might find yourself converting the comment into a full-blown answer because of general peer acceptance.
You might be pretty certain of your answer. In that case, put your rep on the line. Worse case, you'll have negative responses pointing out why your approach isn't a good one. At least you'll learn something, and the OP will, too! If necessary, you can always delete the answer. But, if you genuinely think that you could be correct (because you've used that approach before), then step forward.
If I'm not sure what the OP is asking, or not at least mostly sure I'm correct, I tend to take the approach of commenting. Sure, someone may answer the question with exactly what you were thinking, but it shouldn't be about the rep.
Edit
As Deduplicator mentioned, you may find yourself going back-and-forth in comments, anyway. Often, you'll find that it isn't that you don't know the answer to the OP's question - it's that the OP hasn't included enough content to be able to be answerable. If you (and others) don't fully understand the question, there's no harm in asking the OP for more clarification via comments, and that may in turn generate an answer by getting the OP to think it through...