let me try a kind of summary
You don't seem to be able to understand it on a device level, nor a circuit level - both of which we have tried on you.
Here is another attempt - which I indicated quite a while for you.
The following is a simulation of two ideal devices, G1 on the left is a voltage controlled current devices and F1 on the right is a current controlled current devices. Both are configured into a gain stage.
The graph shows a dc sweep where Vin goes from 0v to 100mv, and Vout1 / Vout2 goes from 5v to 4v, as expected - Vout2 was shifted upwards by 0.1 so it is not right on top of Vout1.
Now, F1 and G1 are completely different devices in that one is voltage-controlled and the other is current controlled.
Question for you, which of them is a bjt and which is a mosfet?
:0
Thanks for posting that.
Indeed the response is the same, irrespective of whether it's current or voltage controlled.
Now look at the input impedance of the current controlled amplifier and you find it's pretty similar to what you'd expect from a BJT amplifier.
Hi Hero999 - up to now, I didn`t comment this example from dannyf because it does not meet the point (for my opinion).
However, because of your answer - I have changed my mind.
This example does not meet the point (that means: The subject of our discussion) because it describes CIRCUITS with external elements.
But this was not the problem to be discussed in this thread. Instead, we were discussing the control mechanism INSIDE the BJT.
Let me take another
simple example: It is commonly accepted to treat the classical opamp as an voltage amplifier (does this apply also for the "current-control group" in case of BJT input stage?). However, with external elements the whole CIRCUIT can be used, for example, as a current amplifier or as a current-to-voltage converter. Buth this operation does not say anything about the transfer characteristics of the opamp unit alone. Do you know what I mean?
More than that, several times I have emphasized the fact that during DESIGN of an amplifier circuit it does not matter at all how/why the collector current of a BJT changes its value.
There is no doubt, that I can send a current into the base and watch if and how the current Ic varies. But this cannot tell us anything about the control mechanism because the same is possible with a voltage.
But the situation changes as soon as we have to
explain to somebody else WHY the BJT (or a circuit with a BJT) shows a certain behaviour.
I have presented many examples, which cannot be explained with current-control - on the other hand, nobody was in the position to proofe the opposite.
(I don`t know if I have mentioned already that, for example, the EARLY effect can only be explained using voltage control. It`s that simple.
Perhaps it is even better and more clear to say: The existence of the Early effect, in fact, prooves that the BJT is a voltage controlled part.)