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The first Pentium chips had a processing speed of 60-66 MHz
The first Pentium chips had a processing speed of 60-66 MHz
A Pentium 1 running at 200 Mhz (both MMX and non-MMX) requires a 66 Mhz bus and a multiplier setting of 3.
Mhz
The fastest "classic" Pentium is clocked at 200 Mhz. The fastest Pentium with MMX extension is clocked at 300 Mhz. The fastest Pentium II is clocked at 400 Mhz. The fastest Pentium III is clocked at 1.4 Ghz. The fastest Pentium 4 is clocked at 3.8 Ghz. The fastest Pentium D is clocked at 3.7 Ghz. The fastest Pentium M is clocked at 2.26 Ghz. The fastest Pentium Dual-Core is clocked at 2.5 Ghz.
No Intel Pentium 4 processor was ever manufactured running at a clock speed of 500MHz. However, the previous product line, the Pentium III, had several variants running at that clock speed.
"Classic" Pentiums were available with clock speeds of 60, 66, 75, 90, 100, 120, 133, 150, 166, and 200 Mhz. Pentiums with MMX extensions were available in 120, 133, 150, 166, 200, 233, 266, and 300 MHz.
this means your computer have a processor with 513 MHz processing speed.
2.
"Classic" Pentiums were available with clock speeds of 60, 66, 75, 90, 100, 120, 133, 150, 166, and 200 Mhz. Pentiums with MMX extensions were available in 120, 133, 150, 166, 200, 233, 266, and 300 MHz.
100 MHz
With this being a Pentium II, or Pentium III, you would be looking at a speed of either PC100, or PC133. Hope this helps be safe Cadishead Computers