I wrote most of the following before anyone else had replied, just never clicked to post, so sorry if if it goes over the same ground as other people's replies or doesn't address some of their points.
Thanks for the mention Oldshep, got to agree you don't do anything near enough mileage to make an LPG conversion financially worth it.
RutlandRover - Don't buy that front end from Ebay. It is an old OMVL system, judging by the spud location I might even have originally fitted that system to the Rangerover the guy on Ebay removed it from! I would now expect the pictured OMVL injector rails with black coils (a very old type) to have a lot of wear on them (the new OMVL Superlight type with plastic rails and blue coils last a lot longer and are far more reliable), the reducer will have seen better days, as will the pressure sensor and ECU. The pictured parts wouldn't cost a great deal more to buy new than the old parts pictured, but all new parts would mean you would have to drill and tap your manifold (which isn't a big deal and in no way should be considered a plus point for buying second hand).
Front end parts mean just the parts that go under the bonnet, no tank, filler or any piping and wiring that run under the vehicle between the filler, tank and engine components. You would be well advised to fit new piping everywhere anyway rather than piping of that age.
Not a bad brand at all though, when I first started fitting sequential LPG systems I fitted nothing but OMVL because it had comparatively decent performing injectors and a reducer that could handle big power (far better than modern day OMVL reducers in fact) and back then front ends were bought as a complete set (ECU and loom, injectors, reducer), where these days we tend to buy individual components. The components in the second hand system are older spec than a new OMVL system though, the injectors are not as reliable and the ECU though sequential isn't truly sequential.. That's all I'll say here about sequential but not truly sequential or I'd be going into too much detail! The old ECU can give just as good results on a P38 as a new truly sequential ECU.
These days you'd have trouble buying a new front end that was mutlipoint but not sequential (but such systems do exist and were commonplace at one time... Tartarini Etagas is one example of such a system), you could easily get hold of a single point mixer system but I would only advise a multipoint sequential system.
I could sell you a complete (including tank, filler, piping, etc etc) brand new DIY kit for about £800, or you could buy the same bits from a supplier for less, but I give very detailed tech support with my DIY kits while the customer fits the system, and then the customer can bring the finished install to me and I will sort any minor problems and calibrate it properly without charging any extra. Don't forget the £800 includes the tank etc, I sell new front ends for P38s for £500. To supply and fit job done I'd be looking at £1400. To be honest I didn't join this forum with intention of making money out of being here, I'm here out of interest and won't think anything if you buy bits elsewhere etc.. Gilbert and a few other forum members could talk you through the install if you bought bits elsewhere and I would still chip in with tips and help on forum. The front end parts I'd generally supply for a P38 would be much the same as those in the LPGShop link above, though I may supply a different reducer. The reducer in the link is the modern version of OMVLS Dream unit, which (as said above) won't flow anything like the same amount of gas as the old spec Dream reducers (won't go to the same bhp level) but is capable for a P38, the old spec Dream reducer would be capable or at least just about capable for a supercharged L322!
Seems ages since I last did any major LPG work on a P38, in reality it's probably only about 5 weeks, but I've got one coming in on Thursday and will at least be removing it's OMVL Piro ECU and loom to fit a different ECU and loom. Piro was supposed to be OMVLs replacement ECU for the AEB2568 spec OMVL Dream ECU like the one being sold on Ebay (and one from LPGshop) but they never did manage to get Piro working properly and it was a short lived system, even OMVL went back to AEB2568.
Simon