You state that the contents of the comments on the post (answer) are:
...very relevant to anyone who finds this question and it's answer.
Edit the comments into the post
In that case, you should edit the comments into the post. When doing so, include an edit summary that says something like "Move relevant comments by OP into the [question/answer]." This should be done any time comments contain information which is "very relevant" to the post. Comments are considered temporary (even though they often stay around permanently), as has already been mentioned, are not considered for searches.
At the same time, you can update the links to archives of the relevant pages. In that case, I'd use an edit summary like: "Move relevant comments by OP into the [question/answer], with dead links updated to archives."
Finding archives
Archive.org
My go-to method for finding archives is to go to the dead link and use a bookmarklet which will cause archive.org to show any archives for the page which is the current URL:
javascript:void(window.open('https://web.archive.org/web/*/'+location.href))
Mementos
You can also search multiple archive sites by looking for Mementos:
javascript:void(window.open('http://www.webarchive.org.uk/mementos/search/'+encodeURIComponent(location.href)+'?referrer='+encodeURIComponent(document.referrer)))
Google's cache
While it's not appropriate as an actual archive link, for relatively recently deleted data, you can look in Google's cache:
javascript:void(window.open('http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:'+location.href.replace(/https?:\/\//,'')))
Seeing what's in Google's cache can sometimes help with finding the information elsewhere when you don't know what the contents of the page were. For those with <10k reputation, it can also be used to see some questions in the state they were prior to deletion, when the question does not have an archive.org based archive.
After edit approved, flag comment(s) as "no longer needed"
Once the edit placing the information from the comment has been actually applied into the post (i.e. your edit is approved), you can flag the comment as "no longer needed".