PetaMolis

PetaMolis

EV route planner for Indonesia, built for scooters

4 followers

Scooters are 85% of all motorized vehicles in Indonesia, its electric offerings are steadily growing, people like to tour — and yet there's no route planner. PetaMolis fills that gap: an optimized charging-stop finder that accounts for real riding conditions, geographical elevation, and even the weather. Home-grown, crowdsourced charger database, built specifically for Indonesian roads. Made in Indonesia, by an Indonesian EV rider who loves touring — for everyone who loves the quiet wind.
PetaMolis gallery image
PetaMolis gallery image
PetaMolis gallery image
PetaMolis gallery image
PetaMolis gallery image
PetaMolis gallery image
Free
Launch tags:TravelTransportationMaps
Launch Team / Built With
AssemblyAI
AssemblyAI
Build voice AI apps with a single API
Promoted

What do you think? …

Arkan Tanriwa
Maker
📌
I had a long touring history for an Indonesian. In 2 years, I've covered around 4,000 kilometers about the country. It was all with an ICE motorbike, of course. The day came when I got solar panels at home and bought a cheap EV scooter on top. It was mesmerizing; the torque, the speed, the launch... the fun. And affordable to boot: one full charge only costs a few cents, free during daytime. The problem was that to tour, I had to plan charging stops. It was complicated. There are many public chargers here in Indonesia already, but the only map of it that exists was only by Google. (And it misses the little treasures that matter: small shops and warungs that quietly let riders top up. Those places are tiny cultural artifacts of Indonesian hospitality, and they’re invisible to the official maps.) Most route planners are made for cars, by car manufacturers or foreign teams. They rarely consider scooters, even though scooters are what Indonesians actually ride. So I built this. It’s powered by a growing community of EV users who crowdsource charger locations, and by the generosity of small shop owners, coffee stalls, and even farmers sharing their irrigation pump sockets along the route. Hopefully this helps Indonesian EV scooter users who love to tour and love the quiet wind.