I got this AP for free, and had some fun trying to configure it, and I decided to look at the inside of this thing. It has a PowerPC processor, pretty cool!
By the way, with some not so ancient devices you can search for the firmware here: https://software.cisco.com/download/home and at least get MD5 and SHA-512 hashes to verify the files you downloaded.
Not the case with this AP though.
Edit: Oh, I almost forgot. Also the exact filename. Makes it easy finding it online.
Of course and I tried to search it, didn't find the download on the Cisco website sadly, nor the md5sum for this specific file, I found some other sums tho.
Cisco has a tendancy to remove download or block them behing an account with a licence...
If you surprised why it has a PowerPC CPU. It's actually a SoC.
From the manual:
AMCC PowerPC 405 32-bit RISC processor core operating up to 333MHz with 16KB D-and I-caches.
Designed specifically to address embedded applications, the PowerPC 405EP (PPC405EP),
provides a high-performance, low-power solution that interfaces to a wide range of peripherals
by incorporating on-chip power management features and lower power dissipation requirements.
Sweet! My first computer was a 333mhz PowerPC Mac! Still have that behemoth. Man, I learned video editing and 3d modelind on that thing and totally changed my career path.
Now 25 years later it's decendant (roughly?) is a SoC running a wireless hub!
hard to say for sure, but U109 and U208 could be UART into those Cisco baseband or radio chips. one placement for the 2.4 GHz (G) and 5 GHz (A), respectively. would be interesting to probe around there and see if you get a serial interface to it... obviously for extra credit ;-)