The governor end of the pump has a sensing line that goes to the manifold, the manifold pressure pushes on a diaphragm which in turn moves pieces parts in the governor end to allow the pump to supply full fuel. If you delete the turbo, the engine will smoke horribly. The cylinder heads have built into the casting process, a swirl factor. Without manifold pressure, that swirl effect won't happen. Timing is designed using a turbo. The "smoke limiting" design is across the board, CAV, VE, ND and P pumps use it, it is a federal emissions thing.
I second the shoehorn fit of a B in a GM chassis. No room for a fan, electric is needed, firewall needs "trimming", plumbing for intake and exhaust are kind of a cluster and it's heavy. Seen quite a few in my days, only 1 that I would have considered a good one or something I might consider. Think about this, in stock form, the B is governed at 2500 RPM, the Chryslers had a 2700 RPM gov cut off. What does the V8 turn? What will be the road speed loss if you go from 3000 - 3600 ish to 2500 ish?