The name was a clever tribute to the old "microfiche" system—but with a "cat" for catalog . It was a CD-ROM-based electronic parts catalog (EPC). When it first launched in the early 1990s, it felt like magic.
A customer needed a specific bolt for the alternator bracket of a 1987 Ford Sierra XR4x4. Dave had to pull a film cartridge, thread it into the reader, crank a dial to find the right "fiche," then squint at blurry diagrams. One wrong click, and he’d order a bolt for the steering rack instead. It was slow, frustrating, and error-prone. microcat ford
So, the next time you walk into a dealership, order a specific air filter for a 1998 Ford Ranger, and the parts guy finds it in three seconds on a tablet... tip your hat to . It was the quiet little CD that finally killed the microfiche. The name was a clever tribute to the
But the real story of Microcat happened the dealerships. A customer needed a specific bolt for the