Ah! Your reference to Gateway was inspirational! 😀 Thanks a lot for that clue. I briefly looked through Gateway's support section, but I couldn't find any information about "Gateway 2000" products, or Micronics motherboards. However, a quick google for: gateway 2000 micronics, and I found this excellent webpage -
http://webpages.charter.net/dperr/micronics/gw2k_faq.htm
Reading this webpage, I now wonder if the Micronics board has been "hard wired" to be a 5V CPU only board. Now *that* would explain why the jumpers on the J4 voltage setting are all set to Open (which is actually the 3.3V setting!). If this J4 voltage setting is being ignored by the motherboard, then why waste jumper caps on these pins? So, I think it doesn't matter what jumper setting you choose for J4, I think this setting will be ignored, and the mobo will simply use 5V for all installed CPUs. So, if you want to use an AMD DX4-100 (3V CPU), you will need to use a "voltage regulator".
On this webpage, it says -
...there are the 486 style processors which have an operating voltage of 3.3 or 3.45 volts. These processors require a voltage regulator to operate in a 5 volt motherboard. A voltage regulator is a tiny circuit board installed in the motherboard socket with a 3 volt processor plugged in piggy back style on top.
This webpage also points out that -
All of the Micronics 486 motherboards known to have been used by Gateway were designed for 5 volt processors.
I think that explains why the AMD CPU will not POST. I looks like I have accidentally sent 5V through the AMD CPU. I wonder if I have fried it?