If you know the answer, then you should (generally) post it to the existing question. For example, if there's an old question about how to do x in the kQuery framework, and all the answers are talking about doing it in kQuery 1.0, but there's now a better way to do it in kQuery 2.0, you should post an answer that (A) explains why the new way is better, and (B) shows an example of how it works. Be sure to mention explicitly that it only works in kQuery 2.0, not on older versions.
This is good because it keeps as much of the information as possible in a single place. Your new answer will gradually increase in score over time, and hopefully eventually be at the top of the list. Who knows, if the person who originally asked the question is around, they might even change and accept it. I've seen this happen before several times. If not, oh well. It's not all about earning rep.
On the other hand, if you don't know the answer, you just know that the answers given to an existing question don't work for you on a newer version, then I believe you should ask a new question. As has been suggested, your new question should make reference to the original question, explain why those answers don't work for you, and say that you're looking for a solution compatible with kQuery 2.0 (and don't care about kQuery 1.0 compatibility).
I would caution strongly against posting a bounty on the existing (old) question, as Tiny Giant suggested. Why? Because the bounty is effectively changing the question. From the outset, all of the existing answers are ineligible for the bounty because they do not answer your slightly modified question. Worse, the situation is very confusing for all who happen upon the question because of your bounty because the question itself is subtly different from the question being asked in the bounty box. I've seen users try and do this, and it just doesn't work. So please don't do it. If your question differs in any way, even subtly, from the existing question, don't bounty the existing question—ask a new one.
The system is perfectly capable of handling additional questions. Duplicates are only a problem if they rehash and scatter information that is already available elsewhere. By definition, in your scenario, the information is not available in the other question. As long as you make clear from the outset, in the question itself, why your question is not a duplicate, this should prevent it from being closed as one.
mysql_
questions just because they can no longer use it in the latest version of PHP and want to usemysqli_
orPDO