The Derny was designed and made by Roger Derny and Sons, who were former racing cyclists themselves, in Paris’s Twelfth Arrondissement. It is basically a strong cycle frame with a racing pattern with two extra frame members bowed outwards and a linking steering head and saddle tube. A tubular mount rises from near the pedal assembly to support a Zurcher 98cc deflector-piston two-stroke single engine with an integrated clutch and two-speed gearbox of antiquated design. The unit has a heavy outside flywheel rotating between the rider's knees and a separate magneto ignition.
It is, however, a unit that pulls strongly at low rpm enabling on-the-throttle speed to be precise without the clutch slipping or a lot of changing gears. The fuel is contained in a drum-shaped tank - a Derny trademark - in front of the steering head and the pedal gear is fixed, forcing the Derny rider to pedal at all times.
The exhaust silencer was not particularly effective, and the gearbox gears are straight-cut, as is the primary transmission. Both are only lubricated by oil mist, leading one French commentator to write that “the song of the Derny sawed at the ears of both its rider and the following cyclists”.
No Derny had ever broken down in the race, said the company in its very limited advertising. In 1956 an avantgarde motorcycle, the Taon, was launched but it did not save the company, which was forced to close its doors in 1958 after making perhaps 7,000 machines. The market for a cycle-orientated ‘healthy-pedalling’ machine was gone.
