Official name ABS 3 (AGILA 2)
Alternative name ABS 3 (Agila 2/ABS 5, Agila 2, Mabuhay 1)
Cospar ID 1997-042A
Norad ID 24901
Launch date 1997-08-19
Launch site XSC
Launch vehicle CZ-3B
Country/Organization Philippines
Type application Communication
Operator Mabuhay
RCS size LARGE
Decay date ON ORBIT
Period (min) 1450.7
Inclination (deg) 10.42
Perigee (km) 36069
Apogee (km) 36075
Eccentricity 8.3166999334664E-05
Mean motion (revs. per day) 0.992624250361894
Semi-Major axis (km) 42450.135
Raan (deg) 46.0316
Arg of perigee (deg) 119.246
Shape Hex Poly + 2 Pan
Mass (kg) 2537.17
Height (m) 2.7
Width (m) 5.29
Depth (m) 5.29
Span (m^2) 26.27
Lifetime 12 years
Contractors Space Systems/Loral (SS/L)
Equipment 30 C-band transponders, 24 Ku-band transponders
Propulsion R-4D-11
Configuration SSL-1300
Power 2 deployable solar arrays, batteries

Agila 2, delivered on orbit in 1997, is the most powerful telecommunications satellite in service in the Asia-Pacific region.

Designed, built, and launched by SS/L for Mabuhay Philippines Satellite Corporation, Agila 2 delivers broadcast television, telephone, and data services to an area that covers Southeast Asia, from the Philippines to Hawaii, to India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, and to Vietnam and China.

A single Agila 2 satellite transmits more than 190 channels of high-fidelity digital programming to cable companies and home satellite dishes, along with the capability to handle more than 50,000 simultaneous two-way telephone conversations.

Agila 2 features the largest number of active transponders of any satellite in the region. It contains 30 C-band transponders at 27 Watts and 24 Ku-band transponders at 110 watts, combinable to 12 high-power 220 watt transponders. Total dc power at End of Life (EOL) is more than 8200 Watts. The combination provides a power-to-mass ratio of 5-to-1, making Mabuhay one of the most efficient satellites in the industry.

As part of the contract, SS/L procured the launch vehicle, built a satellite control ground station in Subic Bay in the Philippines, and trained Agila 2 personnel who operate the satellite. The spacecraft was launched on a CZ-3B.

After negotiations with ProtoStar to take the satellite over as ProtoStar-3 came to no conclusion, the satellite was acquired by Asia Broadcast Satellite and renamed Agila 2 / ABS 5 in late 2009. In late 2011 it was repositioned to 3° West and renamed ABS 3

Satellite COSPAR Date LS Launch Vehicle Remarks
ABS 3 (AGILA 2) 1997-042A 1997-08-19 XSC CZ-3B