There's nothing wrong with mechanical pump on a stock bus.
OK, it takes a few seconds longer to start if the bus has stood a long time and the fuel evaporated or leaked out of the carburettor float bowl, but has benefits, to my view. If it has stood long enough to need a good crank, it will build better oil pressure before firing, for example.
I removed a rotary electric pump when I got my bus and went back to mechanical. First the generator style, then alternator style (due to my lack of forward planning)
The electric pump was a bit noisy, but my bigger issue was that I was concerned about it running on in the event of being rear-ended or a fuel pipe coming loose or any other unlimited pumping scenario.
I may be paranoid, but a friend of mine ended up upside down in a ditch in an MGB with electric fuel pump rattling away, the keys having fallen out of the ignition switch. Fortunately no fire, but petrol everywhere.
I got an eBay re-settable cutout switch from a Land Rover, which goes open circuit when you thump it, intending to fit near the left-hand rear light, but decided that because I couldn't really test it in-situ without damage or with any certainty, it wouldn't really set my mind at rest.
And it still wouldn't stop it pumping if one of the pipes split or came adrift.