A slightly late reply to this topic, but I can confirm the chips appear identical internally (stepping may very but impossible to tell).
I have a non-super chip, with "U5SX 486-33 markings" and "Windows Compatible" logo, dated week 46, 1994.
I also have a model marked U5S-SUPER33, dated week 39, 1994. This one also has the "Not for U.S. sale or import" markings.
CHKCPU identifies both chips identically as "UMC U5S (486SX) 25/33/40". Both benchmark the same in all tests and both overclock successfully to 40- and 50-MHz without breaking a sweat on my EISA/VLB system. Performance is very impressive, matching or outperforming its Intel counterparts and even the SGS-Thompson DX2/66.
I am awaiting delivery of a SUPER40 variant and an AMD DX/40 to make further comparisons.
Edit: it arrived. It's week 34 of '94, so the earliest of the three. It behaves exactly the same way and is seen by various tools as the same chip. If they only manufactured one 'SX' die, and marked them based on how they were binned, I have no idea what the criteria were because there's no measurable performance difference here. They all overclock like absolute champs (shame my motherboard doesn't do 60MHz). One thing I noticed is that all 3 chips run very cool. Must be the 0.6 micron process.
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