Hello again,
You are summing up this whole discussion as if this was the sole question that makes or breaks your entire career from start to finish. If you are wrong you have been wrong for almost 50 years. That's not the right way to look at this. It's a simple question, it does not make or break your entire career or make you look bad in any way even if you were completely and entirely wrong. You are much better than that and i always like to hear your take on these subjects.
One thing comes out here however, and that is that you just cant accept an approximation that is "good enough" to show a certain point of fact. It's just a simple concept, it's not the question of the century. The world isnt going to come to end. But i will try to explain my point of view a little better anyway so you might see what i am talking about.
Point of technical fact: if we include the 10 ohm re value when we have already an external emitter resistor value of 1000 ohms, the re makes a small contribution to the total resistance from the 'real' emitter to ground. Either we have 1000 ohms or we have 1010 ohms with and without the re being included. So if the collector resistor is 10k, we see a gain of either:
1. 10000/5000 (my approximation)
2. 10000/5010 (your approximation)
So my gain is 2 and your gain is 1.996, but that's not the end of it. We want to look at the AC gain next.
When the cap comes into play, we might design this stage such that the cap reactance looks somewhat like a resistor at a particular max design target frequency. If we wanted a gain of 10 at the max frequency, then we would have made the cap value appropriate to make the total resistance look like 1000 ohms. So now we have two more gains to look at:
1. 10000/1000 (my approximation)
2. 10000/1010 (your approximation)
So my approximation yields a gain of 10 and yours a gain of 9.9, not a heck of a lot of difference there.
BTW, in a real amplifier an additional resistor is added in series with the resistor that is already in parallel with the cap. This limits the upper frequency gain without depending on the internal re value as much.
Im sure we could find examples that have a more wide difference than that shown here. But this is the circuit i wanted to design and it worked just like that. So you can see how this approximation, being simpler than yours, gets the point across without having to dig too deep in to the theory of the transistor.
Later, more questions usually come up, and those are answered at the time they come up. So the student gets a basic grasp on what is happening and then can ask questions about more of the details as they will surely do anyway.
But dont make this look like an "I am right and you are wrong, or i am wrong and you are right" situation because it's not like that. You're approximation is better than my "very rough" approximation. Your's just requires more basic knowledge of the workings of the transistor to be able to apply than mine does. I was keeping it very simple and showing the same basic idea, while you got more into it and had shown a little more detail. So there is no "If you are right i was wrong for 4000 years" here
