Hi Ronaldo, Please correct me gently if I am misunderstanding you, but are you asking us to do your coursework for you ? If there is something specific you need help with understanding, then by all means ask a specific question, but I think you will find all the information you need will be in your course textbook and in the notes you have taken in class.
So...lets see... I do your tests for you, and you get the top grades, graduate at the top of your class, get snapped up by the industry, and then waste their time and money because you're a complete doofus that can't even bias a simple transistor amplifier.
Here is a clue for you - then you are on your own - collector bias - now go look it up in your text book. This should be in the transistor biasing section, you should be able to calculate the Q-point - then go look in the AC analysis section for the cutoff frequencies - but before you do this go look up miller thereom so you can include the equivalent cap in you cutoff frequencies
The discussion centers on analysis of a single-stage BJT amplifier, focusing on transistor biasing and AC response. Key guidance includes calculating the Q-point using collector bias methods found in transistor biasing sections of textbooks. For frequency response, users are advised to study AC analysis and cutoff frequencies, incorporating Miller theorem to account for equivalent capacitances affecting bandwidth. The responses emphasize self-study and reference to course materials rather than direct solution provision. No specific brands or models are mentioned. Summary generated by the language model.