bike - Balance bicycle

Photograph by Noah Scalinon Flickr.
Although opinions differ regarding which learning sequence is easier for most riders The first balance bicycle was the velocipede, and was invented by Karl Drais, the earliest form bike Advanced stop line of a two-wheeler - without pedals. It can have no brake, or it can have one or two hand-activated rim brakes. To function bike properly, a balance bicycle must be small enough that the rider can walk the bicycle while sitting comfortably in the saddle, putting both feet flat on the ground.
Drais was a German inventor and invented the Laufmaschine ( running machine ), also later called the velocipede, draisine (English) bike or draisienne (French), or nick-named, dandy horse. Children as young as 18 months can learn to cruise a balance bicycle within a few hours practice. With a balance bicycle, the rider learns balance first, pedal last.
It has no pedals, no crankset and chain, and no bike training wheels. This incorporated the two-wheeler principle that is basic to the bicycle and motorcycle and meant the beginning of mechanized personal transport. More recently, wooden balance bikes have undergone somewhat of a renaissance with the introduction of the German built Like a Bike, the US developed Skuut and the Australian developed TIKE. .
In contrast, with a normal bicycle fitted with training wheels, the rider learns pedal first, balance last. It can be a normal bicycle with pedals and related parts removed, or it can be purpose-built (especially for very small children, for whom normal bicycles are generally not available).
His first reported ride from Mannheim to Rheinau (now a section of Mannheim) took place on June 12, 1817. The rider first walks the bicycle while standing over the saddle, then while sitting in the saddle.
