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Difference between revisions of "intel/microarchitectures/80486"
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| process 2 = 800 nm | | process 2 = 800 nm | ||
| process 3 = 600 nm | | process 3 = 600 nm | ||
− | |isa | + | |isa=x86-32 |
− | |||
| succession = Yes | | succession = Yes |
Latest revision as of 18:34, 30 November 2017
Edit Values | |
80486 µarch | |
General Info | |
Arch Type | CPU |
Designer | Intel |
Manufacturer | Intel, AMD |
Introduction | April 10, 1989 |
Phase-out | 1995 |
Process | 1 µm, 800 nm, 600 nm |
Instructions | |
ISA | x86-32 |
Succession | |
80486 was the microarchitecture for Intel's 80486 line of microprocessors as a successor to the 80386. Introduced in April of 89, 80486 was initially manufactured using 1 µm process (later 800 nm). For AMD, this microarchitecture was used for their Am486 and Am5x86 families. This architecture was superseded by Intel's P5 in 1992 and K5 in 1994.
History[edit]
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Process Technology[edit]
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Architecture[edit]
Key changes from 80386[edit]
- Testability
- JTAG interface support (Std. 1149.1-1990)
Die Shot[edit]
- 1 µm process
- 1,200,000 transistors
Facts about "80486 - Microarchitectures - Intel"
codename | 80486 + |
designer | Intel + |
first launched | April 10, 1989 + |
full page name | intel/microarchitectures/80486 + |
instance of | microarchitecture + |
instruction set architecture | x86-32 + |
manufacturer | Intel + and AMD + |
microarchitecture type | CPU + |
name | 80486 + |
phase-out | 1995 + |
process | 1,000 nm (1 μm, 0.001 mm) +, 800 nm (0.8 μm, 8.0e-4 mm) + and 600 nm (0.6 μm, 6.0e-4 mm) + |