The idea of breaking down a broad question into sub-questions seems like a good one - it's basically what the "too broad" policy is instructing you to do. But these new questions should be instead of the original, not subservient to it. And the fact they were created this way is a historical footnote, not an on-going part of their existence.
If the original question is too broad, it may at some point be closed, and even deleted. It's therefore imperative that the new questions don't rely on it, and probably they shouldn't even reference it. They might reference each other, or maybe the answer to one might reference another, but if you end up writing "this is part 1 of a series of 10, click here to see the index", you're no longer writing a Q&A, you're writing a blog or tutorial. And that doesn't belong here.
What's more, each of these new questions will stand and fall on its own merits; they should each be high quality and on-topic. If you split a question into a part that discusses software design, and a part that covers hardware configuration, the hardware part will probably be flagged as "Off-topic, migrate to Super User or Server Fault?" So even linking between the questions should be incidental, not essential to understanding each.