A 'draisine' primarily refers to a light auxiliary
rail vehicle or
trolley.

Drais' Laufmaschine 1817
The eponymous term is derived from
German Baron Karl Christian Ludwig 'Drais' von Sauerbronn, who invented his
Laufmaschine (
German for "running machine") in 1817, that was called ''Draisine'' (English) or ''draisienne'' (French) by the press. It is the first reliable claim for a practically-used
bicycle, basically the first commercially successful two-wheeled, steerable, human-propelled machine commonly called a
velocipede, nick-named
hobby-horse or
dandy horse.
[1]
Later, the name draisine, came to be applied only to versions used on rails and was extended to similar vehicles, even when not human powered.
Dressin, Velorail or Railbike

Rail-cycle with 4 wheels
'Draisine' is spelled 'dressin' in Sweden and 'dresin' in Norway. In Finland the word is "resiina". Usually, dressin refers to pedal-powered rail-cycles which were used by railroad maintenance workers in Finland, Sweden and Norway until about 1950.
Now dressins are used for recreation on several unused raillines in Sweden, Norway, Poland and some other northern European countries. There are several companies renting dressins in Sweden.
In Finland there has been annual competition "Resiina-ralli" (translates "Draisine Rally"), which involves several draisine teams traveling many days in the railroads from one corner of the country to another. The rally is televised and gathers great popularity among TV-viewers.
Military usage
During the
Second World War, armoured draisines were used in the
Invasion of Poland. They were typically
tanks or
tankettes adapted with rail wheels and used as reconnaissance elements in advance of
armoured trains.
References
★ A useful short article on draisine transport on railways in Europe appears in the September 2006 of
hidden europe magazine. The full reference is Gardner, N. (2006) Muscle Power - Draisine Travel. In
hidden europe, 10, pp.41-44
See also
★
Railcar
★
Velocipede
★
Balance bicycle
External links
★
Draisinenfahrten
★
Railbike in Europe
★
Information and Equipment for Railriding and Railbiking
★
Railbike Tours, Inc.
★
Railbike International
★
Dressin used on 50 km railine in Sweden