If there's something significant enough wrong for it to need to be closed...
Close it. Close it quickly.
The problem, as I see it, is that everyone just sits around waiting for the question to be fixed (or perhaps just move on without voting, or ... ironically ... ignore the issue because closing takes long). Closing (new questions with fairly popular tags) only takes a long time for this reason.
There really isn't much point in waiting around for OP to fix the issues before voting to close. Closing is far from permanent - we have a reopen system largely to reopen closed questions that have been fixed. Not a lot of questions get reopened, but this is because it's fundamentally off topic (unfixable), the asker doesn't bother fixing it, or the reopen system is broken. For the first two, we should close them ASAP, the latter means we should fix the system ... then close inappropriate questions ASAP.
My rule of thumb is to only wait a bit (after posting a comment pointing out the problem) if I expect the user to:
Agree that it's a problem
Adequately fix the problem.
Adequately - sometimes users incrementally try to fix a problem. Users that don't express themselves well may require quite a bit of guidance to adequately fix the problem - there isn't much point in having the question remain open while it hasn't been adequately fixed.
And do so in the next few minutes.
This includes problems I think will just take too long to fix - if I expect it's going to take anyone at least around 30 minutes to fix the issue, I'm not going to wait around for 5 minutes for you to fix it.
And I may decide to vote to close a question simply because I don't think the user will be able to fix the issue in the next few minutes, regardless of how hard they try or how much anyone helps (but they could certainly fix it eventually). Again, keep in mind that questions can be reopened.
I may wait a few minutes for a user with > 1k reputation, 200-1k is a bit on the fence, and I'd typically just vote to close practically straight away for someone with < 200 reputation.
I also tend to assume a top-down processing of comments - if you've responded to an unrelated comment B posted after comment A pointing out the problem, it's likely that you've already taken any action you would've in response to comment A. I realize this isn't always true, but it's just based on my experience, and is a simple rule to apply.
* I don't think reputation is the best measure here, but there isn't much else to work with that's as easy to come by.