Accept/read whatever answers you like, but evaluating all answers is often interesting for you when you ask a question.
And acceptance is your only decision, so answerers know that it can be complete random depending on who is asking. I'm not a great fan of acceptance myself (Too much importance given to questions with accepted answers). Well, it just states "it worked for me". It's a small indication of usefulness at least.
I've seen a lot of times the worst answer accepted, and the best (and highly upvoted) answers left unaccepted, just because the answer fixed a small typo in your code, when other answers pointed out issues with the complexity or security of your code, and explained how to fix it, but more effort was required to understand what was said.
For instance, if a high-reputation user answers, it's worth looking at the answer, because those people usually (not always) try to provide quality answers and know the rules about answering.
Also, I've seen a lot of askers systematically upvoting all answers: don't do that, unless they're good, and let the others vote. A lot of copycat answers are there just for the answerer to get reputation points, not to help you.
How long should you try to make an answer work ?
Well if it doesn't work right away, maybe it's not as good as it looks. You can comment if you still find that it is a potentially good solution, and see if you get replies.