What you propose may not be closed, and may not get downvotes but I'm not a fan of it because it is really not an optimal way of writing for SO.
My advice for self-answered questions is to play dumb, but not too dumb. Pretend that you don't already have an explanation for it. What methods would you use to figure it out? What tests would you perform? What documentation would you read? Write your question in a way that presents the problem and the tests you performed and the results you got and detail what it is you already know from reading the documentation. (This is where a lot of self-answered questions fail: the user already knows the answer so the question is a perfunctory one-liner rather than an actual problem.)
Then, post an answer that explains why you think the thing that puzzles you happens. The community will comment and vote on your answer. So you'll soon know whether or not you were right.
The way you suggest doing it, then in the case where your research is 100% right on the money and you explained the reason why perfectly, then what are people supposed to answer?? "Yes, you're right." When it comes to reputation, votes and acceptance, I'd rather see them attached to your excellent explanation rather than "Yes, you're right."
I am not swayed but the argument that if the OP is unsure, then they should not post their explanation as an actual answer. If what the OP has in hand is a wild guess, then they should not post their wild guess at all, be it in the question or the answer. If they have done their homework, which is what they should do in any case when they post on SO, they have more than a wild guess in hand. They may still have an honest mistake but honest mistakes are posted all the time on SO. If the OP happens to make an honest mistake, their honest mistake does not necessitate special consideration. It is not worse than any other honest mistake posted on SO.
Moreover, what I'm suggesting here is consistent with a long-established custom of SO: when users post answers in their question, we ask them to post their answer as answers. (See this meta question.) Whenever I run into a question that contains an answer, I edit the question to remove the answer, and leave a comment informing the OP that as a matter of editorial practice, answers belong in actual answers, not in questions, and inviting them to post an actual answer. In some case, I've posted the answer myself as CW, if circumstances called for it. I've never ever encountered the notion that there is an exception to the no-answers-in-questions-principle if the OP states that they are unsure about their answer. And I do not think that such exception should exist.
What the OP is presenting here is not materially different from any other run-of-the-mill situation where an answer is presented in a question.