I'm looking for a low cost means to drive nine 28vac outputs, and a single 115vac inverter with a 400Hz analog sine wave. The source is not PWM... It's an actual analog signal, and this is not something I can get around. I've seen plenty of inverter designs that simply produce square wave, or modified "sine" outputs, or use capacitors on the output side of the transformer or PWMed inputs to create a sine output, but I don't know whether it's safe to feed such a design an analog input.
One thing I've considered is audio driver ICs, particularly for the 28vac outputs. These are not constant outputs, but rather, outputs that can be attenuated from 0-28vac, and are all phase synchronized with the 115vac output. I'm not as experienced with amplifier design and all this analog domain stuff... Something that could take a 0-5v input, feed it into an audio amp, and then capacitively couple that output into a transformer to bring the output up to 28vac would probably be ideal... But then again, I'm not well versed in this stuff. These outputs are simulating the electrical behavior of a synchro control transformer, and at best, are probably operating in milliamp range, so I don't think overall power needs to be too high. That's why I'm thinking audio amplifiers might do the trick.
The 115vac output is different. It's a fixed output, meant to run on a constant 115vac at 400Hz, and it serves as both power supply and phase reference. This is all meant to drive a Lear Siegler ARU-11/A ADI. I've got basic hookup info, but I don't have info on overall current draw of the device, so this is another element I'm not certain of. I don't think current draw is too high though. I've seen devices that do what I'm trying to do, and they are rather compact. I think they may even forgo the transformers and just directly drive the outputs, but I have to imagine such a solution is also very specifically engineered... I'm not exactly at that level.
I am open to anything from general advice, dos and do nots, schematic examples, to "here's a PCB module on Ali Express that'll do what you need"... Also advice on transformers that might meed my needs. I know 400Hz transformers are smaller than 50 or 60Hz ones. That's done to save weight on aircraft. I know 60Hz on a smaller transformer meant for 400Hz will saturate it, but can you go the other way around, or an I asking for trouble doing that. For the 28vac outputs, I was actually thinking about whether I could make audio coupling transformers do the job, provided I can find something remotely suitable. I suppose I could theoretically go through the tedious process of making a transformer as well. My employer makes electric motors, and we are set up to be able to wind stators and rotors, and to stack and fluidize laminations... I suppose I could go that route, possibly, but off the shelf is preferred. Part of designing this is to provide an open source means of controlling aviation instruments like what I have, and right now, all the solutions I see are both proprietary and come with "call for pricing" price tags. The cheaper and simpler and more easily sourced the parts, the better.
I guess I'm looking for advice on two separate fronts here:
The 28vac outputs I imagine can probably be solved with something like an audio amp design. I need nine identical outputs, so cost is a consideration too.
The 115vac power supply is something that I'm more worried over. The instrument this is powering cost a pretty penny, and I want to power it with something that's not gonna blow it up, so I wanna do this right. I've been staring at one schematic after another, looking at inverter design after inverter design, and time and time again, it's square, modified "sine, and PWM... never, ever true analog sine input, so I guess I'm just not sure where to start, or what I can or can't do.