In most cases, the MAC address used is immaterial, as long as there are no conflicts with another MAC on the same subnet. MAC-address cloning (changing) is primarily for users that have an ISP that “registers” a specific MAC address for their subscriber’s equipment and won’t connect to anything else.

The MAC address for the wireless, if you don’t modify the settings, will be repeatable. If, for some meaningful reason, you need to set it for your upstream wireless, I would just use what you see, the …:76 address, as I understood your post.

Perhaps a side note, or perhaps meaningful, is that MAC-address filtering provides virtually no additional security. As you can see, they can be trivially changed and are “visible” to anyone, without connecting to your wireless network.