x86 CPU Collection (Caution: Bandwidth Heavy)

  • Thread starter Thread starter Zetr0
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies 26
  • Views Views 5693
Some interesting Facts about the IDT WinChip's

RISC Architecture
The design of the WinChip was quite different from other processors of the time. Instead of a large gate count and die area, IDT, using its experience from the RISC processor market, created a small and electrically efficient processor similar to the 80486, because of its single pipeline and in-order execution microarchitecture. It was of much simpler design than that of its competition, such as AMD K5/K6 and Intel Pentium II, which were superscalar and based on dynamic translation to buffered micro-operations with advanced instruction reordering (out of order execution).


Deployment
WinChip was, in general, designed to perform well with popular applications that didn't do many (if any) floating point calculations. This included operating systems of the time and the majority of software used in businesses. It was also designed to be a drop-in replacement for the more complex, and thus more expensive, processors it was competing with. This allowed IDT/Centaur to take advantage of an established system platform (Intel's Socket 7).


Limitations
Although the small die size and low power-usage made the processor notably inexpensive to manufacture, it never gained much market share. WinChip C6 was a competitor to the Intel Pentium and Pentium MMX, Cyrix 6x86, and AMD K5/K6. It performed adequately, but only in applications that used little floating point math. Its floating point performance was well below that of the Pentium, being similar to the Cyrix 6x86.[3]

The WinChip 2 added a 3DNow! processing unit to strengthen floating point performance, but its 3DNow! unit was not as fast as that in AMD K6-2.[4] This successor targeted the Intel Pentium II, Cyrix MII, and AMD K6-2 processors as competitors.


Closing Call
The industry's move away from Socket 7 and the release of the Intel Celeron processor signalled the end of the WinChip. In 1999, the Centaur Technology division of IDT was sold to VIA. Although VIA initially branded processors as "Cyrix," the company initially used technology similar to WinChip with its Cyrix III line.
 
Hey Keith m8! I have the same OCD lol

I have had nearly all of those cpu's, infact I still have some lurking away.

On a recent hunt/tidy I found some unused Evergreen 486 upgrade kits, god knows where I got them from lol.

Are these Evergreen kits suitable to upgrade an Intel 486DX-33? If so, I might take one off your hands.

These upgrade kits... I have no info on them at all other than they are still in protective cases and are brand new. I can go and find them and do pictures, grab info etc. From what I can recall they are kinda like adaptors that go from one chip socket up with a new cpu and fan. The fans are decent ball-bearing jobs aswell! None of that cheapy nasty sleeve stuff that plagues socket7 stuff back in the day! I will try and find them this weekend :)
 
Hey Keith m8! I have the same OCD lol

I have had nearly all of those cpu's, infact I still have some lurking away.

On a recent hunt/tidy I found some unused Evergreen 486 upgrade kits, god knows where I got them from lol.

Are these Evergreen kits suitable to upgrade an Intel 486DX-33? If so, I might take one off your hands.

These upgrade kits... I have no info on them at all other than they are still in protective cases and are brand new. I can go and find them and do pictures, grab info etc. From what I can recall they are kinda like adaptors that go from one chip socket up with a new cpu and fan. The fans are decent ball-bearing jobs aswell! None of that cheapy nasty sleeve stuff that plagues socket7 stuff back in the day! I will try and find them this weekend :)

From what I recall, the Evergreen upgrades were 133MHz 586-compatible CPUs that dropped into a 486 socket. Sometimes affectionately referred to as the DX5, they provided a modest performance increase to an existing system. You may have to check your motherboard socket and voltages for compatibility though.
 
Are these Evergreen kits suitable to upgrade an Intel 486DX-33? If so, I might take one off your hands.

These upgrade kits... I have no info on them at all other than they are still in protective cases and are brand new. I can go and find them and do pictures, grab info etc. From what I can recall they are kinda like adaptors that go from one chip socket up with a new cpu and fan. The fans are decent ball-bearing jobs aswell! None of that cheapy nasty sleeve stuff that plagues socket7 stuff back in the day! I will try and find them this weekend :)

From what I recall, the Evergreen upgrades were 133MHz 586-compatible CPUs that dropped into a 486 socket. Sometimes affectionately referred to as the DX5, they provided a modest performance increase to an existing system. You may have to check your motherboard socket and voltages for compatibility though.

Somewhat OT: Those Evergreen upgrades are very useful if you happen to have a '486 second processor in a RiscPC and can't find / afford a 'proper' '586 version.
 
I remember the 'Intel Overdrive' chip/adapter that could upgrade a 486 PC to an 83MHz Pentium... Very useful back in it's day :)
 
Ahh the memories....

So good you posted them, I can see them but they don't clutter my house anymore :)
 
A very nice collection! The nice thing is that it's a collection that really doesn't take up too much room, especially when compared to collecting whole systems. :)

Heather
 
Back
Top Bottom