BRP Juan Magluyan (PC-392)
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History | |
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Philippines | |
Name | Juan Magluyan (PC-392) |
Namesake | Juan Magluyan was an officer of the Philippine Offshore Patrol during the Commonwealth Government period, and was the Chief of the Philippine Navy in the 1960s. |
Operator | Philippine Navy |
Ordered | 1995 |
Builder | Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co., Batangas, Philippines |
Acquired | 1998 |
Commissioned | July 1998 |
Reclassified | April 2016: From PG-392 to PC-392 |
Status | in active service |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Jose Andrada-class coastal patrol craft |
Displacement | 56.4 tons full load[1] |
Length | 78 ft (24 m)[1][2] |
Beam | 20 ft (6.1 m)[2] |
Draft | 5.8 ft (1.8 m)[2] |
Installed power | 2,800 hp (2,100 kW)[2][3] |
Propulsion | |
Speed | 28 knots (52 km/h) maximum[1][2] |
Range | 1,200 nmi (2,200 km) at 12 knots (22 km/h)[1][2] |
Boats & landing craft carried | 4-meter rigid inflatable boat at aft[3] |
Complement | 12[2] |
Sensors and processing systems | Raytheon AN/SPS-64(V)2 I-band Navigation / Surface Search Radar[2] |
Armament |
BRP Juan Magluyan (PC-392) is the twentieth ship of the Jose Andrada-class coastal patrol boats of the Philippine Navy. It is part of the third batch of its class ordered in 1995, and was commissioned with the Philippine Navy in July 1998.[1][2] She is currently assigned with Naval Forces West in Puerto Princesa, Palawan.
She was funded using FMS credits by the United States government. As part of the third batch ordered for the same class, she was built by the Philippine partner of the Trinity-Equitable Ship Yard of New Orleans, the Batangas-based Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co. Shipyard.[1] She also appears to have a bulletproof covering over the pilothouse windows.[3]
The ship spent time in dry dock at Colorado Shipyard in Cebu in 2005.[4]