I had similar problems with the Bounder and it turned out it was a relay. The carbureted models have a relay that controls the in-tank pump, mine was bad intermittently. I would as suggested either have the pump output pressure tested or check it yourself.
I went to a chain type auto parts store and bought enough fuel hose to reach to the tank from the dash. I bought a low pressure fuel pressure gauge (you will need a high pressure gauge) and hooked it up through an unused connection of the pressure/flow regulator. Started up great, idled for about 25-30 minutes while I adjusted pressure regulator and cleaned up tools. Started for the gate of the storage yard and suddenly, poof no pressure. Finally found the relay causing the problem, In my case the relay is multifunctional and no longer made. Followed suggestion found on this forum and spliced in a substitute relay, no more problem.
I ran the pressure test several times to see if there was any other problem. A mechanic who decided from what he knew, that the pump was good, but he checked the pressure, once, and had pressure so shut the engine off, I kept it on to see if any specific driving pattern caused the drop. Long story short, if the problem is present upon start up, a short test is probably good. If the problem occurs after warmup and is random you need to keep the gauge hooked up and drive until the problem resurfaces.
"I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel's sake. The great affair is to go". R. L. Stevenson
David Bishop
2002 Winnebago Adventurer 32V
2009 GMC Canyon
Roadmaster 5000
BrakeBuddy Classic II