| Make and car model | Pontiac Firebird Trans Am Series 2 455 |
| Production year | 1973 |
| Body type | Coupe |
| Number of doors | 2 |
| Exterior colour | white |
| Interior colour | bordeaux |
| Fuel | petrol |
| Displacement (ccm) | 7456 |
| Number of cylinders | V8 |
| Engine power (PS at rpm) | 335 at 4800 |
| Top speed (km/h) | 195 |
| Acceleration 0-100 km/h (sec.) | 8,0 |
| Gearbox type | automatic, 3-speed |
| Fuel consumption, combined driving (l/100 km) | 25,0 |
| Mileage | unknown |
| Number of produced copies | 7 100 copies of model Firebird Trans Am Series 2 455 from 1971 to 1976 |
| Price (€) | 29 538-Sold at auction within the exhibition and fair |
Company Pontiac (1926-2010) was a brand of automobiles manufactured and sold by General Motors (GM); though production ended in 2009, Pontiac remains a registered and active trademark of GM. The Pontiac automobile brand was established in 1926 as a companion make between Oakland (high-priced vehicles) and Chevrolet (low-priced vehicles). Name of automobile manufacturer, Pontiac was given after name of town Pontiac in U.S. state of Michigan (the heart of american automobile industry). The Oakland Motor Car Company (1907-1931) of Pontiac, Michigan, was an American automobile manufacturer and division of the General Motors Corporation. Purchased by General Motors in 1909, the company continued to produce modestly priced automobiles until 1931 when it was absorbed into Pontiac. Company Oakland was founded in 1907 by Alanson Partridge Brush (1878-1952), who designed a light car with a wooden chassis, and founded Brush Motor Car Company (1907-1909), and later the Brush Runabout Company (1909-1913), based in Detroit, Michigan. The Pontiac cars overtook its Oakland parent in popularity and supplanted the Oakland brand entirely by 1933. In early-2009, amid financial problems and restructuring efforts, GM announced it would discontinue manufacturing and marketing vehicles under the Pontiac brand by the end of 2010 and focus on four core brands in North America: Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac, and GMC.