There were two revisions of the K5 architecture, internally called the
SSA/5 and the
5k86, both released with the K5 label. The original set of "SSA/5" CPUs had its branch prediction unit disabled and additional internal waitstates added; these issues were remedied with the "5k86", resulting in up to 30% better performance clock for clock. The "SSA/5" line ran from 75 to 100 MHz; the "5k86" line ran from 90 to 133 MHz. However, AMD used what it called a
PR rating, or performance rating, to label the chips according to their suggested equivalence in integer performance to a Pentium of that clock speed. Thus, a 116 MHz chip from the second line was marketed as the "K5 PR166". Manufacturing delays caused the PR200's arrival to nearly align with the release of K6. Since AMD did not want the two chips competing, the K5-PR200 only arrived in small numbers.
SSA/5 • Sold as
5K86 P75 to P100, later as
K5 PR75 to PR100 • 4.3 million transistors in 500 or 350 nm • L1-Cache: 8 + 16 KB (data + instructions) •
Socket 5 and
Socket 7 • VCore: 3.52 V •
Front side bus: 50 (PR75), 60 (PR90), 66 MHz (PR100) • First release: March 27, 1996 • Clockrate: 75, 90, 100 MHz
5k86 • Sold as
K5 PR120 to PR166; later PR200 • 4.3 million transistors in 350 nm • L1-Cache: 8 + 16 KB (data + instructions) •
Socket 5 and
Socket 7 • VCore: 3.52 V •
Front side bus: 60 (PR120/150), 66 MHz • First release: October 7, 1996 • Clockrate: 90 (PR120), 100 (PR133), 105 (PR150), 116.6 (PR166), 133 MHz (PR200) ==References==