If you're learning WebFLIS, you're already losing.
WebFLIS, Publog, FedLog, NMCRL — they all store the same NATO Stock Number data. They all make you learn their search forms first. DAITK skips that step: you ask in plain English and get the answer from live FLIS and NMCRL data in under two seconds. Free for anyone with a military email.
The data is fine. The interface is the tax.
WebFLIS asks you for an NIIN, an FSC, a Reference Number, a CAGE, an INC, a unit of issue, and a date range — and that's the easy screen. Publog wants you to install a desktop client. FedLog wants you to know which subscription tier you're on. None of them speak English. All of them assume you have an afternoon to learn their conventions before you can ask the question you came in with.
Same answer. Two very different paths.
- Open the system
- Log in (or remember which subscription you have)
- Pick the right search screen (there are several)
- Fill in NIIN / FSC / Reference Number / CAGE
- Guess which fields are required this time
- Click Search
- Parse the result table
- Decode the abbreviations against a separate manual
- Repeat for the next NSN
20–40 minutes per lookup, if you've been trained.
- Open Dibblee
- Type the question the way you'd say it to a colleague
- Read the answer
Under two seconds. No training course.
What you can ask, in plain English.
- › Who manufactures NSN 4010-21-900-1132?
- › Is NSN 5310-00-543-4652 still active, and what's the DEMIL code?
- › Find me Canadian alternates for CAGE 80205 part number MS35338-44.
- › What's in FSC 4010 from supplier NCAGE L0TZ1?
- › Give me every NSN in this RFP that's no longer active.
All answered from live FLIS and NMCRL data. Same source as WebFLIS — different front door.
If any of these sound like you, stop reading manuals.
New to a supply, logistics, or contracting role and staring at a WebFLIS training PDF? Skip it. Use Dibblee for the actual lookups; learn WebFLIS later if you ever need to.
You only touch the system every few months and forget the search syntax every time. Dibblee doesn't have search syntax — just ask.
RFP gives you a list of NSNs and you need to know which are active, who supplies them, and what alternates exist. Paste the list. Ask. Done.
Cross-referencing NCAGE, NSN, and FSC across nations? Dibblee speaks both FLIS and NMCRL. One question, one answer.
It's the same data. It's just usable.
Same source records as WebFLIS, Publog, FedLog, and NMCRL — queried in real time, not scraped or cached weeks ago.
No NIIN/FSC/INC fields to memorise. Ask the way you'd ask a colleague who knows the catalogue.
Dibblee Industries has been catalogued in NATO supply since 1940. The agent inherits that domain expertise — it knows which abbreviations matter and which are noise.
Paste an RFP. Drop in a parts list. Ask follow-ups. Dibblee holds the thread the way a search form never will.
Free for every NATO military user.
If you have a military email, DAITK is free. No procurement cycle, no training course, no licence tier — sign up with your service email and start asking. Same FLIS and NMCRL data as WebFLIS, answered in plain English. The next answer is two seconds away, not two weeks of training.