Im sorry I think I didn't xplain the question better, would the woofer being blown have caused the amp to blow a channel, I had this happen 4 times, I thought I was playing too loud...
I think it is much more likely that the amp blowing a channel caused the woofer damage.
If I understand you correctly when you said earlier that "on the woofer that does not work one of the cables is separated", then that would mean that the circuit is broken with it and it is the same as hooking up nothing as far as the amplifier is concerned. If you have a meter, hook it up to the blown woofer (on the places where the wires would attach if it were mounted in the speaker cabinet) and measure its resistance. If it measures "infinity", then hooking it to the amplifier would be the same as hooking up nothing, as far as the amplifier is concerned. But don't buy a meter just to test this, because you are probably about to throw away the old woofer anyway.
If you mean by "separated" that the wire is broken and no longer connected to itself, then hooking it up is like hooking up nothing.
Also, if you are repeatedly blowing a channel, you need to stop playing it so loud with those speakers. You either need a more powerful amplifier (or one that can handle lower impedances or both), or you need more efficient speakers (or easier to drive speakers or both). Doing the same thing over and over again is most likely going to keep giving you the same results. So until you get different speakers or a different amplifier, keep the volume down, unless you want to pay for getting the amplifier fixed again and possibly buying some more replacement woofers.
You mentioned earlier that the woofer was marked 4 ohms. How many woofers are in each cabinet? Do you have a link to information about this specific speaker? If there is one woofer, and it is 4 ohms, then it would be odd to rate the total speaker as 8 ohms. Not
necessarily wrong, but most likely wrong. Usually, with a single 4 ohm woofer, the total speaker should be rated as 4 ohms (or less if the midrange/tweeter are less). Some manufacturers, however, basically lie when it comes time to tell you what the total, "nominal" impedance of the speaker is, because they know that a lot of amplifiers are rated only for 8 ohms or higher, so they want to rate the speakers as 8 ohms, even when they should be rated less. Of course, not all manufacturers are lying scumbags who will say anything to make a sale, but some of them are.