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) 1450.76
Inclination (deg) 9.64
Perigee (km) 36066
Apogee (km) 36081
Eccentricity 0.00020790885275895
Mean motion (revs. per day) 0.992583197772202
Semi-Major axis (km) 42451.635
Raan (deg) 49.0035
Arg of perigee (deg) 21.6806
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