AMD K6-2

K6-2
General information
LaunchedMay 28, 1998
DiscontinuedEnd of 2003[1]
Common manufacturer
Performance
Max. CPU clock rate200 MHz to 570 MHz
FSB speeds66 MHz to 100 MHz
Cache
L1 cache64 KiB
Architecture and classification
Technology node250 nm
MicroarchitectureK6
Instructionsx86
Extensions
Physical specifications
Cores
  • 1
Sockets
Products, models, variants
Core names
  • Chomper
  • Chomper Extended
History
PredecessorK6
SuccessorsK6-III, Duron
AMD K6-2 266 MHz

The K6-2 is an x86 microprocessor introduced by AMD on May 28, 1998,[2] and available in speeds ranging from 266 to 550 MHz. An enhancement of the original K6, the K6-2 introduced AMD's 3DNow! SIMD instruction set and an upgraded system-bus interface called Super Socket 7, which was backward compatible with older Socket 7 motherboards. It was manufactured using a 250 nanometer process, ran at 2.2 volts, and had 9.3 million transistors.

  1. ^ AMD to kill K6, K6-II, K6-III
  2. ^ "AMD Introduces AMD-K6-2 Processor with New 3DNow! Technology". Advanced Micro Devices. 1998-05-28. Archived from the original on 2014-02-02.

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