At some point within the next few hours. Shouldn't be more than a day.1
For example, in your experiment (in which answer A, answer B, and answer C all have a single downvote and no upvotes, resulting in -2 reputation each), you experienced the following timeline of events:
- 2024-06-26 07:02:25Z – deleted answer A
- 2024-06-26 07:03:55Z – undeleted answer A
- 2024-06-26 07:21:15Z – deleted answer B
- 2024-06-26 09:25:00Z – reputation recalculated to take all the above into effect, resulting in a gain of +2 reputation
- 2024-06-26 09:35:08Z – deleted answer C
- 2024-06-26 09:35:42Z – undeleted answer B
- 2024-06-26 13:15:00Z – reputation recalculated to take all the above into effect, resulting in no change to reputation
Note that this recalculation timing is not reflected in your reputation history, which backdates changes to the moment of deletion. The +2 reputation gain is shown occurring at 2024-06-26 09:35:08Z (when answer C was deleted), as that is when the event responsible for the change occurred in the latest recalculation:
1 This is based on my experience as a moderator (including the ability to see when the recalculation actually occurred). I don't know the actual implementation.