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The Am5x86 (also known as the 5x86-133, Am5x86, X5-133, and sold under various 3rd-party labels such as the Kingston Technology "Turbochip" [4]) is an Enhanced Am486 processor with an internally set multiplier of 4, allowing it to run at 133 MHz on systems without official support for clock-multiplied DX2 or DX4 486 processors.
Am5x86 350 Am5x86: X5-133 1 No 133 33 FSB 16 Socket 3 Socket 2 Socket 1 168 pin discrete: K5 500, 350 AMD K5: SSA/5, 5k86 1 No 75–133 50, 60, 66 FSB 8+16 0 Socket 5 Socket 7: discrete: K6 350, 250 AMD K6: Model 6, Littlefoot 1 No 166–300 50, 60, 66 FSB 32+32 0 Socket 7: discrete: MMX + MMX: 250, 180 AMD K6-2: Chomper, Chomper Extended ...
AMD Am486DX 40 MHz AMD Am486DX2 66MHz AMD Am5x86-P75 AMD Am486 DX2-66 die shot AMD Enhanced Am486 DX4-120 die shot AMD Élan SC450 in Nokia 9000 Communicator. The Am486 is a 80486-class family of computer processors that was produced by AMD in the 1990s.
The K5 is AMD ' s first x86 processor to be developed entirely in-house.Introduced in March 1996, its primary competition was Intel's Pentium microprocessor.The K5 was an ambitious design, closer to a Pentium Pro than a Pentium regarding technical solutions and internal architecture.
This article gives a list of AMD microprocessors, sorted by generation and release year.If applicable and openly known, the designation(s) of each processor's core (versions) is (are) listed in parentheses.
The AMD Am5x86 and Cyrix Cx5x86 were the last i486 processors often used in late-generation i486 motherboards. They came with PCI slots and 72-pin SIMMs that were designed to run Windows 95, and also used for 80486 motherboards upgrades. While the Cyrix Cx5x86 faded when the Cyrix 6x86 took over, the AMD Am5x86 remained important given AMD K5 ...
Historically, AMD's CPU families were given a "K-number" (which originally stood for Kryptonite, [1] an allusion to the Superman comic book character's fatal weakness) starting with their first internal x86 CPU design, the K5, to represent generational changes.
The AMD K5 microprocessor is a Pentium-class 32-bit CPU manufactured by American company Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and targeted at the consumer market. It was the first x86 processor designed by AMD from the ground up, and not licensed or reverse-engineered as previous generations of x86 processors produced by AMD.