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1962 Pontiac Catalina Super-Duty

Below is the High Performance Pontiac magazine article 1962 Pontiac Catalina Super Duty - Patina Of Preservation read the article, browse photos from the article, or search related articles in the Automotive.com Enthusiast Central.
1962 Pontiac Catalina Super Duty - Patina Of Preservation
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1962 Pontiac Catalina Super Duty - Patina Of Preservation


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With a compression ratio of 11.0:1, the combination was factory-rated at 405 hp at 5,600 rpm and 425 lb-ft of torque at 4,400 rpm. A heavy-duty clutch disc and pressure plate assembly and a Borg-Warner T-85, heavy-duty, three-speed, manual transmission backed the powerful mill. A Borg-Warner T-10, four-speed, manual was available at extra cost. The rear differential housed a 4.30:1 gear set.

Don Gay's '62 Catalina
With his son's success after Hayden's tutelage, it was only logical that Carl equip Don with the most potent Pontiac the Division had produced to date. Carl ordered an Ensign Blue '62 Super-Duty Catalina sedan with No. 221 Blue interior to be raced under the dealership's banner. Its list of optional performance equipment included the No. 13B Super-Duty 421, No. 511 Dual Exhaust, and No. 691 Safe-T-Track limited-slip differential.

Assembled on June 12, 1962, at the Pontiac, Michigan, assembly plant, the Catalina was fitted with several aluminum body panels aimed at reducing overall race weight. Carl flew into the Division's hometown to accept delivery of his latest acquisition, which retailed for $4,099. He then drove the 405hp beast back to Dickinson, where James Osteen finely tuned the Super-Duty engine, added tubular headers, and removed the exhaust system.

Just 15 years old when he slid behind the steering wheel of the Super-Duty Catalina for the first time, Don dominated A/Stock classes, consistently turning the quarter-mile in the mid-12s with a trap speed around 113 mph. He took top honors at a number of local, state, and regional tracks, regularly leaving with class trophies.

Pontiac Engineering slightly improved the Super-Duty cylinder head during the '63 model year, and Osteen, who doubled as crew chief, installed the No. 980 castings. Don chipped away at the '63 race schedule and eventually worked his way into the NHRA National Championship Drag Races at Indianapolis Raceway Park in Indiana on Labor Day weekend, September 1963.

At 16 years old, Don was the youngest driver entered into the field. Though competition was fierce, hot-shoe Gay mowed down the A/Stock contestants, taking the win in the final round over Ralph Swain's '62 Chevy with an elapsed time of 12.81 at 112 mph. With that, he became the youngest champion in NHRA history. Proving it wasn't a fluke, he followed that feat the following February, taking top honors in the A/Stock class at the '64 NHRA Winternationals.

Don progressed into Top Fuel racing and though it remained A/Stock race-ready, the Catalina sat idle. He advertised its availability in National Dragster magazine in 1967, and Don Visovatti of Virginia, Minnesota, became its next owner for the paltry sum of $1,800. Visovatti raced the Catalina in its Gay livery that year before repainting it a lighter shade of blue and naming it "Rainmaker" for the '68 season. The Catalina was retired from competition in 1972.

Herb's Encounter
With so many Chevrolets and Pontiacs roaming his town during the '60s, Herb amassed quite a collection over the next several decades while the Catalina hibernated. "Chevys were always cheap and plentiful, so I bought as many as I could. I started buying up Pontiacs, too, and presently own 18. I always wanted a '62 Super-Duty but it had to be just the right one. I started my search in 1999 and passed on three different Catalinas, and even a Super-Duty Grand Prix."

Herb received a call from friend Jeff Dypwick of Chaska, Minnesota, in September 2007. "Jeff learned of a Super-Duty Pontiac in nearby Virginia from another friend, Dewey Miller," says Herb. "It was an old '62 Catalina racecar that was part of Don Visovatti's estate, and was for sale. I didn't know until after a bit of research that it was the same Catalina originally campaigned by Gay Pontiac. At that point, I was determined to purchase it."

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