Short answer? There isn't a short answer.
With cars that average 38 years old, the starting ritual is going to become pretty individual. If everything is perfect, the car starts with a twist of the key and nothing else. The Cold Start Valve does the "pumping" for you. Now with variations of compression, ignition, fuel mixture, phase of the moon, wife's attitude, whether or not the dog is in the back, etc., each car is going to be a bit idiosyncratic. Cold, (a relative term in North Florida
) my car was firing off after about three revolutions, and that was before I tore it down to rebuild it.
For warm up, the owner's manual suggests that you drive off slowly and at moderate speed, rather than allowing the car to idle to warm up. Again, that is going to be a little individual depending on the condition of the engine and transmission.
For Doug's question, I hate to grind a starter. If the car isn't starting in just a few revolutions, something is out of adjustment. However, it doesn't snow here. In the extreme heat, I guess there could be some issues of fuel evaporation that require you pump some air for a bit before it caught. But the fuel injection pump should have the pressure to overcome that.
Ray
'68 280SL 4-spd Coupe