I have a DGV. I bought Nigel with a worn and neglected Zenith, and after spending too much time and money on it...basically, I got desperate for <span style="font-style: italic">anything </span>that would let me get on the road sooner. The Weber worked right out of the box for me...just a little twiddling with mix and idle, but it sure didn't seem to need new jetting.
I bought it as a kit for the 1500, with manifold etc., so I assume the jets are adequate for it. If you bought it with carb+manifold, yours should be too.
I'll echo what Chris said: First <span style="font-style: italic">make sure </span>you have no vacuum leaks, <span style="font-style: italic">especially </span>if you have the Pierce intake. It may require you to grind a bit on the exhaust manifold to make clearance for it, and shim up the mounting clamps so it holds snugly. It took me several tries to get the manifold to sit tight and flat to the head; even when it looked all right.
Having done it, though, and even though Nigel's been running over a year on the Weber, with no attention paid to the carb <span style="font-style: italic">at all</span>...I wouldn't do it again. Knowing what I know now, (thanks in large part to the guys on this here forum,) I would have gone with an SU4 bolted onto the 1500 manifold instead. Nigel's Zenith was thrashed beyond rebuilding, and used SUs can come cheap--much cheaper than a Weber. For all a Weber's complexity and fine-tune-ability, it doesn't have the economy or the responsiveness that an SU has for a Midget. (I don't have any firsthand knowledge of this, or even hard numbers to back it up--just the word of many Spridgeteers that have tried and compared both.) A Weber also doesn't have the engineering elegance and beautiful simplicity of an SU. Which is odd, frankly, considering the Italian origins of the Weber. But you have the Weber, so enjoy it, 'cuz it's better than no carb at all!

(Just don't expect 30 mpg and lots of low-end torque.)