This is why I won't repair hi-fi.
No-schematics is because it's new rather than Hi-Fi, surely? Little chance of manual -
see hereMy view is that you don't need the latest model of Hi-Fi amp. Unlike other parts of the chain, the old designs are not obsolete tech. I have an Arcam which is of the ideal age (IMO) where they made proper service manuals and used standard discrete parts. Still, apart from the control board, the parts in this amp may be OK too.
I notice this amp has a quirky "class XD" design which is basically Class AB with extra complexity to shift the crossover point away from 0. No idea if that is really an audible improvement but it will certainly make the circuit more complex / harder to debug.
Anyway, Sean, if you aren't confident with fault finding and repair this is probably not be the place to start! It seems like the boards are jammed together in a way which will make servicing it hard. Bear in mind the amp will have lethal voltages in it and you have the risk that it might literally go up in smoke from attempts to fix it
If you're comfortable with both risks then hack away! Otherwise did you get a quote from Richer / CA to fix it?