Know where the radars are — before you roll past one
Live reports from riders on the road. Speed cameras, cops, accidents. You hear about them before you see them.
The intel network riders actually need
Every radar you pass, another rider passed it five minutes ago and knew it was there. You didn’t — because nobody told you.
We tell you.
How it works
- Ride with the app open. Phone on the tank or in an arm band, screen black.
- Get alerts as you approach. Voice heads-up well before you reach one: “Speed camera ahead.” “Cops on the shoulder.” “Accident blocking the right lane.”
- Report what you see. One tap when you pass a radar or checkpoint. Your report goes out to every rider behind you.
Community-powered. The more riders reporting, the tighter the map.
What gets reported
- Fixed speed cameras (and the limit)
- Mobile radars (the ones parked on the side of the highway)
- Police checkpoints
- Accidents and lane closures
Why this isn’t just another Waze
Waze is built for cars in traffic. The reports you need as a rider are different: the mobile radar that showed up this morning, the checkpoint at the base of a twisty road, the gravel spill after yesterday’s rain. Waze’s community doesn’t care about any of that. Ours does, because they’re on two wheels too.
Who we are
We hated getting a €135 fine for doing 95 in a 90 zone that had a mobile radar parked for exactly one Saturday afternoon. Built this so the next rider gets the heads-up.