I did in post #6.But first maybe we should define efficiency.

That is not the definition of efficiency. I never claimed that they both dissipated the same power in the transistor.Again for the third time speaking only about the dissipation on the transistor.
Nobody said you did and if a transistor is consuming less power and more going to the load then it's operating more efficiently!I never claimed that they both dissipated the same power in the transistor
But the load includes the series resistor, so the power dissipation is just transferred from the transistor to the resistor, thus no significant improvement in overall efficiency.Nobody said you did and if a transistor is consuming less power and more going to the load then it's operating more efficiently!
How much power are the resistors dissipating in both circuits? Do The Math. You would then stop making a fool of yourself.Nobody said you did and if a transistor is consuming less power and more going to the load then it's operating more efficiently!
No, efficiency isI believe the term efficiency in this application is referring to the dissipation of the transistor in the linear mode vs PWM mode
If you are speaking about the total circuit. I wasn't. The transistor dissipates less wattage or heat using PWM therefore it's operating in a more efficient mode. What's wrong with that?No, efficiency is:
Useful power / total power.
Your are correct and I apologize.Somebody should start a new thread
Load on the collector (common emitter configuration) provides voltage gain.Can anyone explain why these circuits posted have the load on emitter instead of the collector ? And what would differ if the load is instead, on the collector ?
With your pot set at max output voltage, the unloaded voltage divider produces only 5V/3= 1.67V and the LEDs get less than 1V each. Whte leds at less than 1V produce no light.You are correct. I showed my circuit working with 2 LEDs. As you add more LEDs you have to increase the base emitter current.