If you crash, your phone calls for help — automatically
The app watches for an impact. If one happens, it calls your emergency contact with your GPS. You don't have to do anything. Because you might not be able to.
The worst case, covered
Nobody plans to go down. But if you do, the first twenty minutes matter a lot — and those are the twenty minutes where you might not be conscious enough to unlock a phone, pull up contacts, or speak a sentence.
The app handles it for you.
How it works
- Set your emergency contact once. Name, phone number, a short “in case of crash” message. Done.
- Start your ride. The app watches for the signature of a crash.
- If it detects one, a countdown fires on screen. You’ve got a moment to cancel if it was a false alarm — bike tipped over in the parking lot, phone dropped, whatever.
- Countdown runs out? Your contact gets a call, a text, and your exact GPS location. Loop retries if the call fails.
You do nothing. You don’t need to be conscious. You don’t need to unlock your phone.
Why it works better than a panic button
A panic button assumes you can press it. After a real crash, sometimes you can. A lot of times you can’t. Impact detection doesn’t wait for you.
And the cancel window prevents the embarrassing 3am call when your phone slides off the nightstand.
Can I add more than one contact?
Yes — up to three. The app calls them in the order you set.
Who we are
One of our riders went down on a solo ride and couldn’t move his arm for twenty minutes. A passing car saw him. If nobody had driven by in that window, his phone would still have been in his pocket, silent. Built this so that never happens to anyone else.