Linksys WRT160N v1.0


 * • 300 Mbps - 2SS 2.4GHz 802.11n (40MHz chan.) = N300 class

Overview
CSE0 serial prefix?

Links of Interest

 * http://wrt160n.net/
 * Reviewed in a router round-up on SmallNetBuilder
 * Listed on the 'Linksys routers' page on Wikipedia
 * On the OpenWrt Wiki

Flashing DD-WRT
On DD-WRT Wiki
 * 1) Read the Peacock Announcement
 * 2) Download THIS Newd_Mini file. dd-wrt.v24_mini_generic.bin.
 * 3) Ensure you have a physical ethernet connection to your router, and disable your wireless adapter, antivirus/firewall protection, and any software that makes strong use of your network (BitTorrent, Streaming Audio/Video, etc).
 * 4) Perform a hard 30/30/30 reset.
 * 5) Navigate to http://192.168.1.1/ in your web browser of choice.
 * 6) Enter no username, and the password "admin".
 * 7) Go to the administration tab. Click on firmware upgrade.
 * 8) Browse to the .bin file you downloaded in step 2
 * 9) Click on the upgrade button and WAIT for the upgrade successful message.
 * 10) Power cycle your router . Wait until you can see the DD-WRT password screen at http://192.168.1.1/.
 * 11) Perform another 30/30/30 reset on your router . Wait until you can see the password screen at http://192.168.1.1/.
 * 12) Set a new username and password, and continue on to configure your router like normal.

You can now upgrade to any generic DD-WRT build except Mega and Micro. Be sure to always do a hard reset prior to flashing another build, do a power cycle followed by another hard reset after flashing, and NEVER re-use a configuration file from a previous build or another router. Always reconfigure from scratch.

Flashing TomatoUSB
Support Chart at Bottom

Serial Pinouts
—JP2—  VCC 1 o  TX  2 o  RX  3 o N/C  4 o GND  5 o

Serial Recovery

 * On VectorMM (in Russian?)

Pictures
Cisco's Images 

Hardware Modification
lim_daniel Wrote:

Just managed to recover my WRT160N from being bricked, and decided to mod the router since warranty is gone...

There are 2 tiny antennas on the PCB. And they are soldered on to the right top side of the PCB. The solder points for the antennas are considerably large and easy to solder even for beginners.

I ripped 2 RP-SMA connectors from 2 old aironet bridges and soldered them onto the PCB. Took 2 old linksys antenna and plugged them in.

I have not substantiated if the coverage is better yet, but preliminary tests shown consistency over a further distance.

It works very well.

Enjoy.