Putting aside the actual content of your question for a moment and speaking strictly from a general and wide point of view, your best interests conflict somewhat with SO policy on this subject. I see it as a byproduct of real-world human nature vs. the best intentions of an esoteric world.
If you have received a good deal of downvotes and/or vote-to-close(s), your best option is to read how to ask, mcve and question checklist then delete your question and rewrite it into a new question that follows SO policy. Do a complete rewrite; changing the title or a few sentences without changing the overall tone of the question is going to get you nothing but a repeat performance with more bad mojo coming from the people who recognize it as an equally lame copy of the original.
There is no reminder¹ for people who DV'ed/VTC'ed to come back to a question that has been revised to review their vote(s) and it is unlikely that they will. In a magical rainbow unicorn world they are supposed to but that simply does not happen on a regular basis. If you edited your question into something appropriate for the 'question-of-the-month' award you might receive a few upvotes but even that voting is going to be skewed by the previous voting stats.
So even with the best intentions and good-as-gold revisions, your edited question is going to receive a restricted audience. Many users disregard negative voted question altogether and some that do look at them do so with the sole purpose of adding to the downvotes.
Personally, if I recognize a question that has gone through a major overhaul for the better, I will certainly retract my VTC and reverse my downvote. I often even double-reverse the downvote with an upvote. I also know from experience that my actions are in the minority as I rarely see the DV or VTC count change beyond my own retraction(s). Perhaps others do not see the revisions the same way I do but I tend to think it is much more likely that they never see them at all.
In reality, copy the original and any meaningful information from the comments and delete it. Rewrite your question into something that you can be proud of and resubmit it. Keep in mind that this isn't a 'keep trying until you get it right' world. Make sure you get it right the second time around².
You might also want to consider that your question may not be right for SO at all.
¹feature-request: Notification on edit of downvoted content
²What constitute a 'good question' is an evolutionary concept on SO. A high-voted question question from several years ago is very likely a crappy question now. Look at recent comparatively high-voted questions for examples of how to formulate your own; don't try to imitate a high-voted question from yester-year.