You ride across state lines. Montana, Wyoming, Utah, wherever the trail takes you. Each state wants something different. A registration here, a trail permit there, an inspection or a safety cert somewhere else. It’s easy to lose track. Right up until you show up to ride on a tag that quietly expired.
From two dates to the whole drawer
This started small. Registration and inspection dates per machine, with a reminder before they lapsed. Riders used it, then told me what was still living in the glovebox. Trail permits. Safety certifications. A second registration for the machine that crosses a state line every weekend. So it grew into the whole drawer.
LookOver now tracks every legal document for a machine. Registration, trail permit, inspection, safety certification, or anything else you label yourself. Each record carries its own state, type, expiration date, plate or ID number, and notes.
One machine, every document it needs
One machine can hold as many records as it needs. A dirt bike registered permanently in Montana that also carries a Wyoming tag and a Utah cert lives as three records on one machine, each tracked on its own clock. Want a photo of the actual card on hand? Keep it in the machine’s file drawer right alongside everything else.
Set an expiration and LookOver gives you a heads up before it lapses, 30 days out and again at 7 days, plus a reminder on the day itself. Mark something permanent and it sits quietly, no nagging.
Why it matters
Before, this lived in your head, a glovebox, or a pile of emails. One expired tag could end a ride before it started, or worse, hand you a fine. Now you record it once, and LookOver carries it. You find out a registration’s coming due at home, with time to fix it, not at the trailhead.
That’s the whole idea. Note it once. Forget it. Ride.
Ride more. Wrench less.