In article , gwhite wrote:
[...]
You entirely missed the point. You don't know the output impedance because you
don't have a way of determining it by swinging the output full-scale.
You don't have to swing the output full-scale to measure the impedance.
Any change in the load, no matter how small, will cause a change in the
output voltage and the output current. From these you can calculate the
output impedance at the current operating point.
When a transistor is operating under large signal conditions into a tuned
load, there is still an output impedance and this impedance still
discribes what will happen for small changes in the load.
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