Although space adjacent to the studio building was limited for erection of the antennae mast, local effort cleared significant trees for this purpose with the help of a new ‘digger’ recently purchased for road construction between Kompiam and Wabag. |
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Simply, a repeater station that needs to be in ‘line-of-sight’ to the main transmitter, receives the radio broadcast signal (using a high-quality professional radio receiver) and re-transmits that same radio program on a separate FM radio frequency.
The chosen repeater site was within a community known as Pakau, Being on a mountain ridge, there was only one possible site with sufficient level area to enable erection of a 20 metre antennae mast, receiving antenna mast and solar system. Negotiations were necessary with the local landowner to use his land, on which his house was erected, for the repeater station. The local community agreed to dismantle the existing house and re-erect it on another nearby piece of land in preparation for installation of the repeater station.
All equipment for the repeater station and also building materials (cement, sand and stones) had to be transported, firstly by road to within 2 kilometres of the site and then hand-carried by local people to the site (a 2km road especially built for this purpose was impassable at the time due to recent heavy rain and small landslides).
Local people prepared the site by digging holes, mixing concrete and assisting with foundations for masts and guy anchor points; also a foundation for battery cabinets and associated solar control equipment, receiver and 50 watt transmitter. They also generally assisted with manual tasks in the erection of a frame for installation of 4 solar panels and erection of a 20 metre mast with four dipole antennae.
The Kompiam station was already on air in a test mode so that when installation of the repeater was completed, its operation could be confirmed by being able to receive radio broadcast transmission on its own separate repeater station frequency (95.9MHz).
Local children showed absolute delight that they were listening to their own radio station.
Radio Training
Radio broadcast training specialists from Australia provided training to local people from the Kompiam communities who had been chosen to be trained as announcers to operate the studio equipment and produce and present radio programs.
After two weeks of intensive production, presentation and operational training, local announcers were ready to go ‘on-air’ and be rostered to provide radio broadcasts each day from the new Kompiam radio station.
Grand Opening
Kompiam Community Radio Station, broadcasting on FM 99.90MHz, and repeater station re-broadcasting on FM 95.90MHz, was formally opened and commissioned on 19 May 2007 by the Member of Parliament for the Enga Province and attended by more than 3,000 people from surrounding communities. After the formal opening, the general public who attended were invited to walk through the radio studio and a very large proportion of the crowd excitedly lined up, to file through in small groups, to see how radio programs were made.
The Future
The estimated population receiving Kompiam community radio programs is around 60,000 people. Radio programs broadcast from Kompiam Community Radio station include a range of different education and development programs covering various health issues and concerns (especially HIV Aids), women’s issues, agriculture as well as informing local people about Local Government information and development matters. The Australian Broadcasting Corporation Radio Australia PNG production unit also provides (supplied on compact discs) especially prepared, in their common language Pidgin English, for radio broadcasts to people living in PNG.









