You might have heard about this hifi in my other topic about Dolby Pro Logic - but this is an unrelated problem. It's quite old by today's standards, seeing as it only has a 3-disc CD autochanger, twin cassette decks and a built-in Minidisc drive 
Edit: Seems this unit is also known as the XR-H330MD - plenty of information for that on Google!
The speakers on this hifi are rather unusual - there's a large bass speaker hidden away at the back inside, and smaller mid-range and high-frequency speakers at the front. The bass is driven by a separate amplifier from the mid-range and high-frequency.
The hifi itself has four amplifiers - two for the left and right mid/high channels, and two for the bass left and right channels. The left bass channel seems to be dead; no signal at all coming out of it. Doesn't seem to come on, not even for a moment if I jiggle the connector around.
I've had the cover off and looked at the PCB, but can't see any dry joints or blown components. There may be bad caps, but I'd have to strip the unit right down to look at the PCB. If the rest of it isn't broken, I don't want to fix it until it is
I've also had a thought - since the bass sound is usually the same on both channels, could I connect both speakers bass channels to the working right amp output? Or would that mess up the impedance and/or blow the speakers? Or anyone got any idea how I could fix the dead channel?

Edit: Seems this unit is also known as the XR-H330MD - plenty of information for that on Google!
The speakers on this hifi are rather unusual - there's a large bass speaker hidden away at the back inside, and smaller mid-range and high-frequency speakers at the front. The bass is driven by a separate amplifier from the mid-range and high-frequency.
The hifi itself has four amplifiers - two for the left and right mid/high channels, and two for the bass left and right channels. The left bass channel seems to be dead; no signal at all coming out of it. Doesn't seem to come on, not even for a moment if I jiggle the connector around.
I've had the cover off and looked at the PCB, but can't see any dry joints or blown components. There may be bad caps, but I'd have to strip the unit right down to look at the PCB. If the rest of it isn't broken, I don't want to fix it until it is

I've also had a thought - since the bass sound is usually the same on both channels, could I connect both speakers bass channels to the working right amp output? Or would that mess up the impedance and/or blow the speakers? Or anyone got any idea how I could fix the dead channel?
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