The PowerPC 7450 "Voyager"/"V'ger" was the only major redesign of the G4 processor. The 33-million transistor chip extended significantly the execution pipeline of 7400 (7 vs. 4 stages minimum) to reach higher clock speeds, improved instruction throughput (3 + branch vs. 2 + branch per cycle) to compensate for higher instruction latency, replaced an external L2 cache (up to 2 MB 2-way set associative, 64-bit data path) with an integrated one (256 KB 8-way set associative, 256-bit data path), supported an external L3 cache (up to 2 MB 8-way set associative, 64-bit data path), and featured many other architectural advancements. The AltiVec unit was improved with the 7450; instead of executing one vector permute instruction and one vector ALU (simple int, complex int, float) instruction per cycle like 7400/7410, the 7450 and its Motorola/Freescale-followers can execute two arbitrary vector instructions simultaneously (permute, simple int, complex int, float). Interestingly, V'ger was designed as a dual core processor but the second core was dropped just before taping out as a strategic (and probably wrong) cost-cutting decision. It would have been perhaps the first ever dual core, an honor that now goes to the POWER4. The 7450 was introduced with the 733 MHz
Power Mac G4 on 9 January 2001. Motorola followed with an interim release, the 7451, codenamed "Apollo 6", just like the 7455. Early
AmigaOne XE computers were shipped with the 7451 processor. The enhancements to the 745x design gave it the nicknames
G4e or
G4+ but these were never official designations. ==PowerPC 7445 and 7455==