Try raising the float in addition to the other suggestions.
Not trying to undermine you but I only see that working if the engine was starving for fuel during high demand and drinking the bowl dry...
Here's a post I wrote awhile ago to help a guy with a Mikuni flat slide carb, same applies to yours if it's a slide carb with a midrange needle jet/jet needle, keep in mind you want to start with the pilot circuit, then the mid range (needle) and then main jet:
I'd start with the needle in the middle position if it has 5 slots or as it came if only 4 slots. Dropping the needle by raising the clip leans it out while raising the needle enrichens it. Start with the mixture screw at 1.5 turns out from lightly seated, being an "air screw" (because it's on the intake side of the carb) by screwing it in you're enriching the mixture and screwing it out leans the mixture.
The goal is to size the pilot jet so the mixture screw's ideal setting is between 3/4 & 2-1/4 turns, if it's not you need to resize the pilot jet. Less than 3/4 needs a larger jet while more than 2/1-4 needs a smaller pilot jet (the opposite jetting applies to carbs with a fuel screw - motor side of carb - but the procedure stays the same). Best way I've found to set it is to increase the idle, play with the mixture screw until you have achieved the highest and smoothest idle then bring the idle back down to ideal. If off idle acceleration isn't crisp, play with the mixture screw a little and see if it cleans up. The pilot circuit is most effective from off idle to about 1/4 throttle then the needle comes into play, all circuits must be tuned individually using their effective throttle positions and sometimes then fine tuned to work together. When adjusting the mixture screw always allow up to 30 seconds for the new setting to take effect and always make smaller adjustments, if looking at it like a clock then 1 to 2 hour adjustments are good.