I'm commenting here as it's on-topic:
A few years ago My Sammi flooded badly, stranding me. Until then it always ran like a top, and the Stock Hitachi Carb was something I never gave much thought to. On inspection there was gas all over it. To try to diagnose I:
1. Removed the fuel return line and blew into it, to make sure it wasn't blocked [it was good]
2. Removed the fuel hose from the carb, plugged it with a screwdriver, and started the engine at full throttle so it could breathe, then let it idle a few minutes until the float ran out. The idea being to jog the float by emptying/ refilling the chamber. This didn't work and it immediately flooded/quit when I reconnected the fuel hose and restarted it. I tried tapping the carb as well, but that did not work at the time.
Had to get towed (how embarrassing!)
I got familiar with the carb via internet and bought a rebuild kit. On tear down the carb was grossly out of adjustment, and the air horn gasket was cracked ( I was pretty careful so I don't think it was me) I experimented with the old needle and seat, it ran fine, but to be safe I put the new needle and seat in from the kit.
I've had trust issues ever since and check the sight glass nearly every start, and 90% of the time it's in the center.
It ran like a top until today, when I essentially had Megaton's experience. A few taps and it was fine, but I headed straight home. I've restarted it a few times and checked the carb sight glass to "catch it in the act", but it's inconsistent, the fuel level being sometimes low/ high, but usually in the middle.
I've scoured the internet for precise discussion of how this happens, distinguishing a needle valve seating issue from the float body rubbing the sides of the chamber (if that's even possible), or some kind of permanent fix, but found nothing. I'm wondering with a 30+ y/o carb it's just something we have to be vigilant about/ live with.
What I Learned: 1.Have familiarity with your carburetor, maybe pack a rebuild kit. 2. Always bring your full toolkit on a trip.