Why not set up a bare-bones wiki as it was initial inspiration of documentation as said in *https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/339974/the-dawn-of-documentation-a-solstice-update*?

After the why, I explain a simpler model that might have worked and why this modern one did not.

My experience comes from being an old contributor to Wikipedia.

I found the experience of a technical writer of other wiki documentation cited in comments irrelevant because if I understand well why the scope of such a wiki is different: It is usually a single project wiki, and it does not have the critical mass of contributors.

The second point is that it seems that instead of start of the simplest model which can work (a bare-bones wiki) and develop around it according to the needs which arised from here, you have developed an overengineered model in the hope it will fit. From my experience, the way that the documentation is single centered around example fit to some of the subjects, but not all.

The third point of failure comparing to Wikipedia is that by wanting the contribution systematically peer reviewed and moreover by several peers you lost immediate feedback for new users.

The fourth point is that you had absolutely wanted to set a reputation system which overconstrained your system. As much it reasonably works together with single contribution document authors such as Q&A it is hard to work with multiple authors. It leads you to have a confirmation system to be sure that people will not game the system. The motivation behind Wikipedia contributors is as long as I can analyze it is mainly to act for the general good.