Truth be told, I've never experienced a hot table like the one I mentioned. It just stayed hot from 8 in the morning when I jumped on it until it started to die down around 5 in the afternoon.
My wife was texting me repeatedly, asking me if I'm hungry, and to stop before I collapse. I jokingly texted her this is a craps session of a lifetime and I need to be brave and soldier on.
I have a mean feeling I probably won't see a session like this again. But one never knows and I will continue to play craps until I die. Hopefully not while I'm on a heater at the tables. 
But yeah, most times my craps session comes out similar to how yours are.
For me, the majority of the time I'm just scratching and clawing to try to break even on my buy-in, lol!
But it's a fun and expensive game and I love it. 
I normally play craps as a break from BJ when the cards start cycling for the house.
On a $10 table, I usually buy in for $200 and force myself to not buy in again unless the table gets hot while I'm down to my last 2 chips. Takes money to make money!
Ordinarily I float about even at first, then lose down to about $50 range. Then I somehow make back up to $200+ very quickly. If it's been an hour, I stop at even rather than give back what I almost gave them once already. If the dice are still favorable and the vibe is positive, I'll stick it out but I keep setting minimums for myself -- if I lose down to $X, I'll leave. That way i walk away up for that session.
My #1 gambling rule besides not getting drunk is money management. I try to keep the loses at a minimum per session by only playing with as much as I want to lose. i also set a limit for how much to win before I start thinking about walking away. I don't try to win back everything I'm down over the trip in one session, and i don't keep chasing a turnaround when on a losing streak.
It's much easier to climb out of a shallow hole.
I watched a lady who spent 14 hours and $35K playing blackjack at Binion's. We chatted before I went to bed, and I stopped and played a few hands with her again at least 6 hours later when i came back. I asked the pit boss for a breakfast comp while she was asking for another marker.
After breakfast, I walked toward her table and a crowd had gathered. She finally hit that winning streak. She was betting table max and was about even after more than $40K in loses. I congratulated her and left before she started losing again. I sure as hell wasn't going to sit down. If I played, and she started losing again, I know who everyone watching would blame!

She apparently had the bankroll to sustain such loses and still have money to gamble. Most people don't. She was also alternating drinking coffee and beer to keep going for so long.
Those with that much cash to play with can withstand the loses until they are able to start winning with table max bets. However, casinos win for the most part because they can outlast most people's bankrolls. You'll be broke and asking for room and food comps if that's how you usually gamble.
I knew a lady from here who started going to Vegas twice a month. I even saw her there twice when I was stopping off for the weekend after a business trip. She was a heavy bettor who loved craps. Her first winning weekend, she made about $45K. She was getting room and airfare comped by MGM. She had a couple of less profitable trips before the bottom fell out. Last trip I was with her playing craps, we ran into a guy that worked in our spaces and his wife. They never played craps before, and we know how beginner's luck can be.
I showed them how you can take your winnings a couple of times before pressing, just to try and take your buy-in off the table and keep playing on your winnings. She, on the other hand, was a press, press, PRESS player, trying to get some big bets paying off when the numbers started repeating. She was also a big fan of betting the hard ways. We played about an hour and the table was pretty packed (Fremont Casino). I walked with $480 profit. The couple won back the $300 they were down from earlier plus another $300 profit between the two of them. Our big gambler was at least $1,200 down. I know she had at least twice that on the layout when the last 7-out was called.
Like Callahan once said, "A man's gotta know his limitations." I'm sure that applies to women, too!
