To expand on my comments:
The onus of a question not being a duplicate is on the asker; they need to be able to clearly differentiate between their question and the duplicate. We can't help if we don't see a difference between them. Not won't, but really can't. This requires the asker to be able to be skilled enough to check the duplicate, and articulate why the question is different, or why the existing answers don't help.
"It doesn't work" is what we usually get, and isn't enough to be able to help them, let alone future readers. Questions are supposed to be able to help more than just the asker. If the asker themselves can't make readers aware of how the question is different...how is anyone else supposed to? We can't play guessing games, or pull the details out of the asker bit by bit. This is information that must be provided so that we can actually help them.
In the event that you run into a question where it's the same problem, but the answers don't help, you have a good start to your research. You know it's been asked, but the answers don't solve your issue. At this point, you shouldn't ask another question. You don't have enough information yet. What you should do, though, is start digging. Why don't the answers work? Is the scenario different? Have you tried the answers? What did they do? What results did they have?
What this boils down to is essentially investing effort into solving your problem. Quite often, doing so obviates the need to ask a question in the first place. In the event that you've tried the answers, and you've managed to isolate where the difference is in them, and still can't solve yours, that is when you ask a new question. You include the research you've done, linking to the other questions you found, and tell us why they and their answers didn't work. That makes the question different, and shows us you put effort into it yourself.
Commenting, in general, isn't meant to ask for more help from answerers. That goes doubly for, "I tried this and it didn't work." Like I said, that doesn't help anyone. If the problem is close enough that it would be a minor change to the answer and wouldn't invalidate the existing problem, you might have a case, but that's generally a very narrow exception. You're far better off digging on your own and asking your own question once you determine the difference between yours and theirs.