by William Hughes » Mon May 25, 2015 7:47 pm
A hot solenoid *coil* is due to several attempts to start in short succession. The inrush current when the starter switch is engaged causes resistive heating in the coil and inductive heating of the metal near the coil. Do it several times in short succession and the solenoid gets hot. Do it way too often and the coil might get hot enough to break down the insulation, causing a short, and then a dead solenoid. Sounds like a normal effect of what you have described during the start up attempt.
If the solenoid *points* are hot (the bits that actually make or break the circuit for the starter motor) then that could be a very serious problem involving too much arcing. But you probably would not be able to do it twice as the points would melt and fuse together, and then shortly thereafter cease to exist.
Dirty solenoid points would induce resistance in the starter motor circuit and prevent it from generating full current. Along with all the other items in the above. Usual suspects that are easy to check are the battery connections, however.