Just a heads up for when you get around to the engine rebuild, and these concerns may not even apply to you.
My car had 18 000 original miles on it when the restoration was done, some 10 or 12 years ago. It had spent over 30 years in storage. Mostly everything in the engine was fine, within limits, and it was completely rebuilt, but a couple of things cropped up early upon completion.
One of the new frost plugs in the head leaked coolant. It was at the back end of the head, up against the firewall on the passenger side, and a bit** to get at, but we managed to get it out and replaced without removing the head again. Check those frost plugs carefully. The culprit had been expanded off centre.
A banging at the back of the engine when at idle, about a week after being put on the road, scared the daylights out of me. It sounded a lot like a thrown bottom end bearing. An old Ford mechanic friend diagnosed a bad flex plate. Sure enough, when we raised the engine enough to break away the tranny, we found one loose rivet on the flex plate.
And when it comes time to rebuild the carb, find an older mechanic who remembers these old teapots. The guy who originally did mine couldn't get mine to run well. The old Ford mechanic I was able to locate later did a second rebuild on mine, set it up properly, and had the engine just purring like a kitten at idle, and pulling strong when asked to perform.
Hope this helps.