

This article originally was printed in the "Spring 2000" Lyman Boat Society of North America (LBSNA) "Islander" magazine. The "Islander" has been called by WoodenBoat magazine as "One of the finest club magazines around". (J/F 1999 WB issue). You can also join the 300+ members who receive the many other fine articles in this Lyman magazine. Check out their enrollment form at www.lbsna.org.
The LBSNA encourages our membership to patronize the businesses both of other members and those who advertise in our magazine. We do not promote the patronage of any one business over another. The Lyman Islander has not contained any articles that could be interpreted to promote any businesses or have a commercial purpose. We have been encouraging restoration shop owners to share their Lyman restoration experience. Our editorial policy in this matter will be similar to other magazines such as WoodenBoat and Classic Boating in that these articles are primarily to provide a technical service to our members with a benefit to those providing the information as being recognized as potential sources of service. The above policy noted, there is no doubt that the most unique business of special interest to Lyman owners and therefore the first business that should be profiled is "Koroknays Marine Woodworking" of Lexington, Ohio.
Last spring, Jerry and I journeyed through the rolling farmland of north central Ohio to the picturesque small town of Lexington, Ohio, the home of Tom Koroknay. Tom, as many of our members are aware, also goes by the name of "Doctor Lyman." His business, Koroknays Marine Woodworking, as he states on his Web page, is "The Lyman Wood Boat Factorywe have all of the original fixtures and patterns to supply you with the replacement parts to make your Lyman just like new." As anyone who has ever been involved with boat restoration or building can attest, the continuously varying and complex curves, bevels and contours of a boat hull do not lend themselves to much use of power tools. Unlike building a dining room table, one cannot just set the wood stock for the stem against the table saw rip fence and run it through. Because the bevel angle of the stem is continuously changing and because of the complex shape of the notch in the stem, known as the rabbet, where the ends of the hull planks lie, the only option for most boat restorers to create this feature is hours of time-consuming chisel work. This is not the way, however, that Tom Koroknay repairs Lyman boats. We were going to have the chance to visit with the man whose possession of the factory jigs to allow fast and accurate power tool production of complex parts make him renowned among Lyman boat owners. Tom welcomed us into his large and well-organized shop. While he spent a few minutes on the phone with a customer, I looked around his shop (photo 1). The previous day, Jerry and I had been at the actual Lyman factory in Sandusky, Ohio. We may have been a bit naive in believing that we would have what amounted to a near-religious experience in seeing the actual Lyman factory in Sandusky. However, after driving all the way from New York State, what greeted our eyes was nothing more than gutted-out and down-in-the-mouth buildings that now were nothing more than storage sheds for modern boats. But looking around Toms shop was something akin to the experience that a Muslim faithful feels on his first visit to the holiest of Moslem shrines, the sacred Kaaba in Mecca.
This rub rail is a gnarled piece of oak that mates to the sinuously twisting shape of the sheer, or upper, plank of the hull. Because of the substantial outward hull flare angle up forward varying to an inward sloping tumble-home angle at the transom, many amateur boat restorers look on fabrication of this cantankerous piece of oak with dread. How did Lyman handle this technical problem? They didnt make this part with a lot of chiseling. As can be seen in the next series of photos, Lyman built a box with angled beds for the rub rail stock to be supported on for a trip through the thickness planer. By this means, squared up oak stock was just laid in the box and after a pass through the thickness planer resulted in a piece with the correct smoothly varying angle along the entire length of the after end of the rub rail (photo 3).
Although the mostly maple jigs that Tom was using that day were solid-looking, he informed us that when he acquired them from the new owners of the Lyman boat factory in 1988, many of them had been thrown outside to rot in the parking lot mud puddles. The new owners of the Lyman boat factory were strictly interested in fiberglass boat production and saw no value to these jigs that were just taking up valuable shop space. Many of these complex jigs had no clear purpose and certainly no label or user instructions. Unlike a new Lyman employee of the 1960s, Tom had to spend much time and effort both refurbishing and learning the use of these jigs without any on-the-job training. Where he sometimes was missing parts to jigs, he had to use his own on-the-spot ingenuity to create a replacement. The next photo (photo 4) shows Tom taking the steamed rub rail stock to a different type of box jig(note the quick-acting clamps) for the forward section of the rub rail. This jig puts the correct curvature and twist into the rub rails. Use of the special jig with the quick-acting clamps is preferable to bending the hull itself because it can be done off the manufacturing line and because the quick-acting clamps allow final setting of the hot oak stock before it cools too much. Tom next demonstrated use of the Lyman two-headed shaper paired with a Lyman Factory stem jig (photo 5). As either stem or knee stock and the appropriate jig face are passed over the cutter with its pilot bearing, with the correct profile and bevel is cut in the stem stock. The two heads on the shaper turn in opposite rotating directions from each other and both of them are necessary at different locations of the stems or knees to avoid grain tear out.
If you want to purchase a catalog or factory photo of your boat, he is the man to see. At the end of our visit, Tom gave a gift of some historic Lyman catalogs and drawings to the LBSNA to assist members in historical research. Our many hours of driving from New York to Ohio were made worthwhile singularly from our visit to Tom Koroknays shop. Tom can supply any wooden part via mail order and also stocks many hard-to-find parts for your difficult Lyman restoration. We wish him the best of luck in his future business and hope to have a future partnering with him to take advantage of his unique knowledge of Lyman history and construction.
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