I think the key here is in where you place the emphasis in your question.

For example, if you want ASP.NET MVC-based solutions that still account for the constraints of your CMS, then simply mentioning the CMS isn't going to be enough to get the MVC experts providing answers that are useful to you. Abstract the CMS out of the question and explain the relevant constraints instead.

For example, your second question mentions the CMS but then focuses purely on the "MVC routing problem." This precludes MVCers who don't know the CMS (your main answerer-base, given the MVC focus of the question) from posting useful answers and makes it difficult for them to identify whether their solutions are feasible or not. Instead, abstract away from the CMS and explain the constraints that cause the problem:

> I am working with a CMS that produces URLs of the following format and I need this to route to... I can't override x in context y because it is provided by a third-party library... 

Or, if you want answers that focus on a CMS-specific solution, target your question differently:

> How can I get `<CMS feature here>` to produce the URLs that I want?

Essentially, the key is to isolate on which side of the integration you want answers to focus. Which side you choose is down to you (e.g. is it a limitation of the framework that's causing the problem or do you think you're just misusing - or not fully comprehending - a CMS feature)?

Pick your target audience, aim your question at them and abstract away the other side as much as you can. If you speak about the problem in general terms with equal reference to both sides of the integration, you will probably attract answers from one side or another that don't fully understand the context/constraints.

If your questions can't be answered in the context of a single technology, you probably need to isolate the problem a bit better.