The Pontiac Legend was Built Before the GTO and Trans Am
It’s safe to say that most car people, and even a lot of non-car people, have heard of Pontiac. Even though the 84-year-old GM motor division went extinct in 2010, models like the GTO and Trans Am live on in muscle car and pony car legend and are firmly ensconced in the collector-car pantheon.
Pontiac’s reputation was built before these iconic models, however, and it was done on the drag strip with cars like the Catalina. Originally a trim on the Chieftain—for 1959, the Chieftain was gone and the Catalina became its own full-size model, offered as a four-door sedan, or two-door sedan–which was technically a coupe. Catalina’s powered by Super Duty 421-cid V8 engines ruled the ¼-mile and in 1962, a Catalina driven by Joe Weatherly racked up 20 of 52 NASCAR checkered flags and the manufacturer’s championship.
The Owner:
Retired NYPD ESU/SWAT Team Detective, Jimmy Shaloo, became enamored with Pontiac’s muscle machines at a young age. Born and bred in Queens, NY, he fondly recalls his bike rides past Myrtle Motors in Middle Village, to leer through the windows at the new models. Pontiac’s “great one” was Shaloo’s first love. His brother Bill had 1966 GTO since new. Later, Shaloo met his buddy Andy, who had a ’65 goat and Shaloo would accompany him to the drag strip, acting as a one-man pit crew.
As for his attraction to the Catalina, Shaloo tells the tale of a souped-up 1962 model with racing stripes that would rumble through the neighborhood and roast its bias ply tires up and down the avenues. The sights and sounds of that potent “Poncho” would leave a lifelong impression.
Shaloo waxed nostalgic about other cars he’s had, including A ‘55 Chevy and 1968 GTO that came and went. But it was around 2015, a decade after retiring from the force, that he began to look for another classic Pontiac. Initially, his sights were fixed on a first-generation GTO, like those owned by his brother Bill and buddy Andy, but nice examples were far too pricey.
Later that year, destiny presented itself in the form of a very clean, all-original, 1962 Catalina for sale at a car show. Shaloo didn’t think twice and grabbed the blast from his past. He says he got an adrenaline rush from his time wearing blue when he got to make arrests and help save lives. Hot-rodding and racing his vintage Pontiac would provide a different kind of rush, but a rush nonetheless.
The Guru:
Every masterpiece owes itself to a talented, skilled, and passionate artist. In the case of the Pontiac hobby on the East Coast, over the last three decades, a particular artist comes to mind. Often referred to as the “Guru”, Richie Hoffman has applied his lifelong wealth of Pontiac knowledge and mechanical prowess to a masterful career and loyal following.
By his own account, Richie, now 58 years old, has been wrenching on Pontiac iron since he was fourteen. He credits another Queens native and famed Pontiac drag racer, Butch Di Lorenzo, with his early exposure. Butch was renowned for his built 1986 Grand Am which ran a 9.50 quarter-mile at 141-mph. Richie worked with Butch for fifteen years and bought the Grand Am two years prior to Butch’s passing in 1998. It now runs 8.90s at over 150 mph. Since 1999, Richie has been a mainstay at the Moonlight Garage in New Hyde Park, where his experience and expertise are in great demand.
The Story:
The Pontiac faithful is a tight-knit group, to say the least. About twelve years ago, Shaloo’s buddy Andy introduced him to Richie. Ironically, Andy used to work with Richie at his first shop, a Gulf gas station owned by Butch DiLorenzo. A drag-race-bred friendship was born, with he and Richie frequently going to English Town and Atco raceway in New Jersey. When he acquired the Catalina, he had every intention of having Richie Hoffman make his mark on it.
The Car:
Shaloo cruised his cool Cat, in factory form, for a year before coming down with a case of hot rod fever. There would be no LS swap here. He was going to keep it old school and all Pontiac. Once again, his buddy Andy put in his two cents, talking him into finding a period correct 455-cid Pontiac motor– believed to be out of ’73 Firebird. He then removed the Catalina’s original 389-cid engine for safekeeping. Shaloo brought the car to Richie’s personal garage, where the two-year build took place.
Richie broke down the motor to its bare block and reworked it. He bored it .040″-over, offset ground (stroked) the factory crank, and installed forged internals including, SCAT connecting rods and Ross flat-top pistons. A Bullet Racing hydraulic camshaft provides considerably higher than stock lift and duration while Harland Sharp roller rockers open and close all stainless-steel valves.
Inhalation starts with a 1000-cfm Holley four-barrel carburetor and flows into the engine through an Edelbrock Performer RPM aluminum intake manifold and Edelbrock aluminum cylinder heads, both ported and polished by Frankie Ford. Topping the heads are tall aluminum valve covers.
Exhaust begins with, 1-7/8-inch ceramic-coated Mad Dog long tube headers. They were the last ones left on the shelf at Nunzi’s Automotive in Brooklyn, owned by legendary Pontiac expert Nunzi Romano. A 3½-inch collector scavenges the gasses and shoots them through an X-pipe and custom 3-inch tubing. A pair of Walker Ultra Flow mufflers belt out a raspy growl.
To better wield the mighty motor’s mojo, Richie replaced the factory three-speed Hydra-Matic transmission with a Turbo 400 three-speed automatic. It features an upgraded shift kit, a heavy-duty drum and clutch pack, and a 10-inch torque converter. Richie also modified the shifter by raising and tuning it to lock into each gear. The power goes to the rear wheels via the stock rear differential housing stuffed with 4.10 gears with a spool and Mark Williams 31 spline axles. The factory chassis was upgraded with power front disc brakes, an improved line lock, and the addition of a rear sway bar. Emphasizing the drag setup is a trunk-mounted battery with an external emergency shut-off and a quick access fuel filter.
All-told, the sixty-two-year-old, 4,050-lb Catalina puts down 525 hp and 600 lb-ft. Richie Hoffman says, “I built it like I would build my own.” He also races it like it’s his own. Richie claims a best ¼-mile pass of 11.78 at 114 mph at Atco raceway, before they ceased operations.
Furthering the Catalina’s old-school toughness is a set of American Racing Torque Thrust wheels, 15×6-inch in front, 15×7 inches in the rear. Shaloo leaves the center caps off the rear wheels for that added drag vibe. Radial rubber resides up front while Mickey Thompson drag radials, basically DOT-legal slicks, wrap the rear rollers and enable sticky off-the-line grip.
Inside, he had the original maroon interior redone in black and white by Top Stich Upholstery in Patchogue, New York. He also added a tachometer/shift light and gauges for water, oil temperature, and voltage. The ’70s-style sparkling plastic steering wheel was on the car when he got it. It looked cool, so he left it.
On the exterior, the original acrylic red paint was changed to a modern basecoat/clearcoat metallic gray, a factory Audi color. It was beautifully laid down by Bona Fide Auto Collision, also in Patchogue, New York.
The additional details are subtle but perfectly executed and purely Pontiac. Shaloo removed the brightwork on the upper rear quarters and applied red striping in the lower chrome side trim. He matched it with red “455” badges on the front fenders, and vintage Pontiac Indian Head decals on either side of the functional hood scoop. He put an array of track decals and Hoffman Racing livery on the rear quarter glass. Last but certainly not least, Shaloo named his creation the “Fat Cat” and had decals specially made to that effect. He ran with Pontiac’s 1960’s GTO “tiger under the hood” marketing tagline and chose lettering featuring tiger stripes.
Through his passion and with help from his Pontiac aficionado friends, Shaloo has the exact car he always wanted. Standing next to his pride and joy, he exalts the Catalina’s classic design, ample power, and rarity. Shaloo says the “Fat Cat” always draws a crowd at shows and he and Richie still drag her a couple times a year at Riverhead Raceway and Lebanon Valley Speedway in New York–after all that’s what it was built for. He has no intentions of ever parting with his legendary Pontiac and says that his son Kevin will inherit it.
As a guy who really wasn’t “into” Pontiacs in his youth, but got involved with one well into my 50s, I can now look at cool rigs like this one with genuine admiration. Nice job!
I had one like that without the hood scoop but same color in 77. Great car. Sold it 3 years later like a fool.
Beautiful color on this car. This Catalina looks really nice. Great job!
Beautiful auto I had a 1972 Catalina was my favorite car ever lost it to a storage bill
Remember my buddy racing a 421 “Super Duty” with tri-power at National Speedway in the 70’s. Those big Ponchos and Chevys were quick with the big blocks! Nice build!
The 455 is not “period correct,” as the article says it is, but that’s what makes the car a hot rod. A true hot rodder doesn’t give a hoot about period correct—just going faster.
Yeah, that one made me wince a bit, too WDJ. The terminology in the story doesn’t fit. As you say though, if you’re building a hot rod and not doing a restoration, you do what you wanna do; the rules are pretty loosey-goosey on “correctness”.
I don’t think there’s a lot of Pontiac guys writing for Hagerty. I recently saw an article where they referred to a 1971 Lemans as “the second to last year of the mid-sized Lemans”. The A-Body Lemans continued through 1977.
Four generations of ‘G; 64-67, 68-72, 73-77, & 78-87. As a Pontiac fan, the only the brand that just won’t die, maybe this will help the writer with his next Pontiac posting.
At least he didn’t call it a big block!
Agree that the wording could use some refinement.
If the build is meant as “period-correct for a late 60s hot rod” I think that mostly jives with what has been done here aside from the color. The interior feels almost 50s custom inspired to me. Car looks good and was clearly a passion project.
I concur. The 455 and disc brakes among the other modifications make it more of a restomod than anything else.
Would love to collaborate on knew ideas, if interested.
We have some great Pontiac Collectors here in Ohio. One has the largest collection of SD cars in the world and some of the rarest parts.
But the Best Cat SD I ever saw belongs to one of the greatest Ford Collectors. Don Snyder here in Ohio has the largest collection of light weigh Fords and Thunderbolts. But up on a rack he has a Super Duty Cat that is as good or better than the day it was built.
Even with the light weight Fords all around he keeps that one up and out of the way as he loves that car.
The Pontiacs of the 60’s hold special things to not even Pontiac fans but other brands too. I know several that love other brands but held cars like 62 Cats in high regard.
Brother George restored a number of classic autos. 57 BelAire convertible, 63 Austin Healy 3000, 67 GTO 2dr.post, 62 340 hp Corvette to name a few but without a doubt, the 1962 factory 421, four barrel, 4 speed 2dr. hard top Catalina commanded utmost respect. What a marvelous automobile. Bro George had a sixth sense regarding style and performance from the 60s. His restorations
were OEM bumper to bumper and I will always be greatful to have experienced them.
I’m 73yrs old and I really enjoyed this article about the 62 Pontiac. Back in 62 my dàd bought a brand new Pontiac Grand Prix. It was red with white interior. It was the coolest car.
Great article. Growing up on long island as a Pontiac and Olds guy knowing the names and reputation of the guys make the story even better. I’m surprised iit doesn’t have a freddy brown tranny in it. The early Catalinas are some of my favorite Ponchos
And a FoMoCo “super duty” hood scoop designed for the 57/58 ‘big job’ and super duty F series . Funny how Poncho factory race team bought a bunch of Ford ‘super duty’ scoops fir their ‘duper duty’ Poncho
Great article, it mentions Myrtle Motors in Queens middle village, my cousin worked there so I was there all the time. Pontiac had a great lineup, beautiful cars can you imagine they’re out of business.
My father had a 62 Bonneville ordered new with a police package. Light blue with a blue interior. Beautiful car . Had a 389 c.i. With 3 – 2 bbl carbs on it . Was one of the terrors of Chicago’s south side back in the day
Your dad had REALLY good taste.
This is a real beauty, not quite sure why one would ever want to part with her…
Nice article on Pontiacs in Canada we had the StratoChief Laurentain and the Parisenne
Yes, I have owned several Pontiacs, all were (are) great cars. My first was a 64 Custom Sport with a 327 engine. My second was a 69 Safari wagon with a 350 engine (had a family then and needed 4 doors). Now I own a 74 Grand Prix. (Could never afford one in 74). Wish I still had the 64 and the 69 today.
Yes, I remember those names from our family’s annual trip via the Queen’s Highway (No. 3) from Detroit to Pennsylvania (through NY) to visit my maternal grandparents.
I had a 1965 Pontiac Catalina with a 389, Rochester 4 carb, came stock. Ford pickup ran a stop sign that I had no choice but to Broadside at 60 mph. Amazingly no one was seriously injured . Thier fault. Thankful to still be here, as well as those at fault. 1965 Catalina was built like a tank with pretty fair 1/4 miles even with a 389 4bbl Rochester. The backseat was comfortable too.
Great car . Gotta go to Jersey to race .long island used to two great drag strips remember when. Carry on
I believe all of the strips in New Jersey have closed. Englishtown still exists, but it’s limited to cart racing and car shows now. Their motorcycle dirt course is still open, as is the airport next door.