Well it's become an Easter tradition for me; the 4 day weekend means doing some sort of major conversion/heart transplant on one of my cars and this year I put a Weber on my Brumby. I took plenty of pics along the way and this is my "How to" thread on this subject. Please note this is how I did it based on the research I did, using various sources which I'll link to later on. This is not the only way to do it, just how I did it.

First of all you need at the very least a Weber and adapter plate. I used this website http://www.jameng.com/categories/Subaru/
And bought their "72-87 Brat" conversion kit. They are brand new carbies with
adapter plate included. They also sell jets on this website and I bought their
Weber 32/36 jet kit, with jets in 3 different "steps" for tuning. But so far it looks like the jets that come in the carbie are pretty well right, whatever size
they are. Also I think it's a good idea to get a fuel pressure regulator, although it may not be necessary. The Webers only really want 3 psi fuel pressure max, any more can upset them. I went to a local shop and got a 3.5 psi max, adjustable regulator. Try and get a single in/out in-line regulator. The shop I went to gave me a dual output T shaped thing, it was a complete nightmare finding somewhere to mount it and I needed to buy extra adapters and plugs etc.
If you are using the standard EA81 intake manifold that's already on your engine you won't have to worry about the next bit. But I decided to use an EA82 intake manifold from the later L series because of the larger intake hole where the carbie bolts up. Is there any benefit from this? that remains to be seen. If you decide to use the EA82 manifold then you'll also need to buy the EA82 adapter plate kit http://www.jameng.com/products/Subaru-B ... apter.html separately. Please note: This adapter plate kit is almost junk (poor quality) but I couldn't find anything else out there, and didn't have time to make my own so I had to make this one work. More on that later
I also bought this spacer
http://www.jameng.com/products/1%7B47%7 ... pacer.html
The idea with this was to insulate the carbie away from the heat of the coolant passage that runs underneath the stock carb. I don't think it's absolutely necessary, you can leave it out if you want. With the 2 plate adapter kit and this spacer it adds about 1 1/2" to the overall height of the carby. With the chrome air filter mine doesn't hit the bonnet.