Great job and nice to see the old girl coming back to life.
As a teenager I was fortunate to have a similar mentor; although he wasn't a Ford man but a retired Chrysler dealership owner (Mathers Motors, Exeter, ON Canada). Harry started out as a apprentice auto mechanic at the tail-end of the Great Depression and, after WWII service, went to work at the local Chrysler dealership, eventually ending up owning it. After selling out in the mid-70s, he worked part-time for my mother's family doing odd jobs that interested him, in the process taking the teenaged-me and my '71 340 Duster under his wing. There was nothing, absolutely NOTHING, car-related that he couldn't do -- mechanical, electrical, paint, body, upholstery, fabrication, whatever. Even more impressive, he was a great teacher and loved sharing his storehouse of knowledge. He had only one standard -- excellence.
Funnily enough, he had little time for muscle cars, claiming they were hard-to-sell, uneconomical, warranty pigs. He passed away a few years ago in his 90s.
Apologies for the hijack; but the level of exquisite craftsmanship brings back memories.