The VX chipset is picky about what SDRAM it will work with. My PCChips M520 does have jumpers to change the memory voltage when going from SIMM to DIMM, but I had a look at the manual for your board and there is no mention of any jumper change needed , and on this board you can even use SIMMs and DIMMs at the same time though I'd think your best option would be to only use one or the other.
Because of memory address limits of the VX chipset most commonly available SDRAM won't be detected properly. Joseph Joestar mentioned that he had good luck with memory modules that were only partially detected on his VX chipset motherboard, I.E. when using a 256 megabyte module only 64 megabytes were detected. I gave that a try with my M520 and I was finally able to get it to POST and detect the RAM with a 256 that was detected as 64 megs, but there was some other issue because it wouldn't successfully boot into Win98. But you have a better quality motherboard so you have a better chance of making SDRAM work.
One thing to keep in mind is that this is a very old motherboard and there is a good chance that the SDRAM slots have never been used prior to this. Repeatedly inserting and removing the RAM from the slots might help if the contacts have become oxidized, but contact cleaner may be necessary. Definitely stick with dual sided SDRAM modules.
From the old Wim's BIOS FAQ. https://web.archive.org/web/20060209035056/ht … w.wimsbios.com/
After watching many YouTube videos about older computer hardware, YouTube began recommending videos about trains - are they trying to tell me something?