I tried a different Chip Ram Simm, no difference. I think the CPU is working from having the caps lock light come on and being able to reboot from the keyboard. I took the 3640 out yesterday and there was no obvious corrosion on the connector. The power supply voltages check out ok with a voltmeter. There are 2 NTSC A520s on eBay that end in a few days. I have a similar device for the Atari St and I might be able to rig up a cable for it with the video out dongle from a dead ST MB I have and either a VGA or 23 pin lead--I have both in my scrap pile. It seems to be getting somewhere in the boot cycle but I have no idea how far.
Ok, We are up to the floppy drive, do you have any other Amiga's that you know work, try you floppy in them to make sure it will boot up, (luckily I have an A1200 for my testing) Once you know that you have a good floppy, take everything out of your Amiga, get it down to the barest minimum. If you have a A520 plug that in and get a good old composite device, monitor, TV even a vcr (hopefully you still have one (but do we remember how it works),
look at your floppy drive ribbon, is it plugged in right, is the red line on the floppy connector connected to pin 1. L
next look at the back of the floppy, is the power plug in right, is the ribbon cable plugged into all pins on the drive.
I also have a Toaster 4000, every now and then, it stops working, and I go through the same ritual, I open the box take it down to bare minimum, then I start pressing on chips, wiggling the ribbon cable on the floppy, taking off and putting back on the power cord, and reseating the accelerator card. I swear that all A4000 have poor solder joints, because sometimes it takes an hour of playing around with objects in the floppy area to get it working again.
I don't think it is really dead, just something that came loose, mine does this at least once every 3 months.