In my opinion, this is the whole point of the link, and Related section on the side of the page.
"Related" becomes more and more irrelevant the more we insist that questions are duplicates when there are practical differences between the two.
This is a Q&A site where the code-focused StackExchange sites and StackOverflow rather serves as, for all intents and purposes, a chrestomathy for a given language.
As such, if a solution does not actually work for the situation, then functionally I would say that's a new question. Whatever algorithm is used for Related (linked, inverse document frequency, etc), people on the old question and the new questions should see the relation between the two.
At the end of the day, your question serves as a historical record. Five years from now, someone might look at that question and be misled - costing time or even money - and this is your opportunity to save that person. I know I get very annoyed when I look at an answer from years ago and the answer is very lazy, obtuse, or even rude and it has upvotes, and I've gained nothing from the research.
But if you link them, or at least ensure your question is explained clearly and concisely, then that's great.
Commenting gets in the way of all of that.