There is no bind. It's 72mhz.
I have one of these in my garage. It flew for about 15 seconds once. I found 3 extra wings for it on clearance a few years ago and bought them. But have never felt the plane was worth it to take out again. As for diagnosing your problem, I'd use a meter to see if you have voltage going to each motor. If you don't, trace the wires back to the speed controllers and see what you have there. Chances are the crash broke a connection that didn't fully let go until after you moved the plane and looked it over.
As for flying Yellow Bees, all I can say is good luck. They have very poor maneuverability, cannot handle any wind, and aren't durable. If there is any obstacle around you will hit it because the plane is essentially a powered glider that can turn a little. Get the biggest most open space around on a windless day and hope for the best. You can't turn while landing or the plane will spin into the ground. It's best to just ditch it in some tall grass to soften the landing. FWIW, there are way better planes out there for beginners for not much more money. These bargain ones are the cause of many trying model planes and giving up because they are so hard for a beginner to fly.