This page will show all objects that are named MII, and if possible sorted on production date.
Click on the blue name(s) or picture(s) below for detailed information, pictures and benchmarks (if available).
This page will show all objects that are named MII, and if possible sorted on production date.
Click on the blue name(s) or picture(s) below for detailed information, pictures and benchmarks (if available).
This is the slowest Cyrix MII CPU within the MII-branding. It runs at a fairly low clock frequency but uses a 75MHz bus to speed things up a bit.
The MII ranged from 233GP to 400GP (rated). The 6x86MX actually uses the same chip as the MII but has a different name; they are available in lower spe... > Read more
This Cyrix MII 333GP came in three versions: one with 66, 75, and 83MHz FSB. This version uses the 83MHz FSB and thus is clocked at 250MHz. The versions with 66 and 75MHz FSB run at 266MHz.
Intel always used 50, 60, and 66MHz bus speeds for their motherboards. Due to dividers, the PCI-bus will ru... > Read more
A black version of the Cyrix MII 333GP. They were also available in grey and gold. IBM had black versions as well, however, with a slightly difference shade of black.
I b... > Read more
Just like this 300GP but with an interesting twist: the MII-logo on the CPU is very small!... > Read more
The Cyrix MII 400GP is the second fastest Cyrix MII processor made. It runs at 285MHz using a 3x multiplier and a weird 95MHz front-side-bus. The Cyrix MII 433GP would be Cyrix’s fastest MII ever to exist at 300MHz using a regular 100MHz front-side-bus. Both the 400GP and 433GP are uncommon since ... > Read more
The Cyrix MII was technically exactly the same as a Cyrix 6x86MX; the only thing different was the name!
This CPU only runs at 233MHz and uses a trouble-free, 66MHz bus. You can get these CPUs with a 75MHz bus as well but they run at a slower clock frequency. Usually a faster bus is better but at... > Read more
A lot of CPU's in my collection look almost identical from a distance. It's hard to tell a Pentium 100, 120, 133 or 150 apart if you aren't close enough to read the sSpec information on the chip. The logo's and detailing on CPU's often stay identical in its course of production.
There are excepti... > Read more
The Cyrix MII 300GP was available in several versions. Read more about them here.... > Read more
This MII 333GP has a 'V' printed on the CPU. I'm not sure what the V means but it might be because VIA acquired Cyrix by then.... > Read more