From what I recall, and it's been a while, a Rockwell chipset modem consists of a CPU (C19 or derivative such as the C29 or C39), some sort of DSP (which I never had information on, it was always just a binary blob and a handful of tuning parameters), a standard ROM or FlashROM (the [234][79]x0[12]0 one or two megabit parts), RAM, and a bunch of other hardware. Older (before about '99, IIRC, and definitely before they started shipping USB modems) Zoom modems were Rockwell chipset (then they transitioned to a Lucent chipset which was based on the Z180).
Digging through my old parts bin, I find a 16-bit ISA 33.6k faxmodem with a 27C010 (one megabit PROM, not erasable) and a PLCC-68 marked "RC336ACFA", "R6749-25", "(C)ROCKWELL 96", "9734 B31463-3", "MEXICO". Looks like the CPU, DSP, and whatever else is on a single chip here. I also find an 8-bit ISA modem of some sort that has two PLCC sockets on it, but which has had all of the socketed chips removed and subsequently misplaced. I would hesitate to power these things up, as I've used them for soldering practice and mined them for parts at various times.
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