My take on carb icing has little to do with heated or not air intakes/filter housing flappers gizmos. Some of my pre 70's rigs over the years since I started driving have had an occasional icing issue
the main causes I have come to learn are in 2 main areas.
One is weather conditions and fuel blends. It's quite rightly known that at the right temperature/humidity conditions; the velocity increase of the air charge through carb venturi's decreases the temperature enough to freeze the air's moisture on the carburetor's parts. What isn't widely known is the fuel's blend can influence that as well. Winter fuel blends have a higher percentage of lighter volatiles,(hexanes, propanes, etc.) to assist in cold weather vaporization of the fuel for mixing and starting/drivability. It's normally not an issue, but an engine with marginal induction/intake heating ability or has a carburetor with air leaks, these blends can affect icing because their vaporization takes heat from an already low temperature fuel/air charge. Fuel vaporization is related to reid vapor pressure, and one of the specs for gasoline that has a seasonal stat. Reid vapor pressure takes 3 chapters in the crc manual to explain and not pertinent here.
Two, icing probability can be related to the condition of the engine's induction. I've seen worn carburetors with say loose throttle shaft bosses more prone to icing. The extra leakage, as mentioned previously, May be tuned for and not a drivability issue except it's extra moisture into the carb on those certain weather conditions. Also heating the manifold as soon as possible will prevent it. A lot of v8's had exhaust crossovers, and like i6's some had flappers in the exhaust manifold to divert the exhaust gas around or under the carburetor's base. After 10 or so years, there's hardly any that still work unless they've been maintained with lube and a new bi-metallic. Thermostats that leak even a little can cause long warm up times and contribute to carb icing if the intake doesn't have an exhaust crossover, or one that's plugged. Vw & corvairs also had thermostats that controlled flappers to throttle cooling air across the engine as well as some had an exhaust riser siamesed to the intake runner for charge pre-heat. Over time the riser plugged, people threw away the thermostats in the interest of "performance", and the icing sitch came.
If you can't repair all the mechanicals; such as a "tight" carburetor or an exhaust riser, preheating the charge by drawing air over the exhaust manifold such as done in later rigs should prevent it. It's only a matter of a couple of btu's to condition the air charge to keep it above "freeze point".