A folding knife's lock is the single most important safety feature on the tool — it is the only thing standing between an open blade and your fingers when pressure is applied to the spine. Lock types vary enormously in strength, one-hand usability, and mechanical complexity. Here is how the major types compare.
Lock Types Compared
| Lock Type | Strength | One-Hand Use | Example Knife |
|---|---|---|---|
| AXIS Lock | Excellent | Yes (ambidextrous) | Benchmade Bugout |
| Compression Lock | Excellent | Yes | Spyderco Para 3 |
| Tri-Ad Lock | Excellent | Mostly (two hands to close) | Cold Steel Recon 1 |
| Frame Lock | Very Good | Yes | CRKT Drifter |
| Liner Lock | Good | Yes | Civivi Elementum |
| Lockback | Good | No (two hands to close) | Buck 110 |
| Slipjoint (no lock) | Fair (spring tension only) | No (two hands) | Case Stockman, Opinel No. 8 |
How Each Mechanism Works
AXIS Lock
A spring-loaded bar rides in a track machined into both handle liners, engaging behind the blade's tang to hold it open. It is fully ambidextrous and disengages with a smooth pull rather than a flick, and it resists developing the play over time that liner locks can accumulate. Patented by Benchmade, it appears on Benchmade's own knives and a small number of licensed designs.
Compression Lock
Spyderco's proprietary design places the lock bar on top of the liner, engaging behind the blade tang rather than springing into the blade's path from below as a liner lock does. This means the lock is mechanically isolated from the failure mode where lateral pressure on the spine could theoretically force a liner lock open into the user's fingers.
Tri-Ad Lock
Cold Steel's reinforced lockback variant adds a stop pin that the lock bar rests against, distributing stress across the pin, lock bar, and rear handle wall rather than concentrating it on a single contact point. This is the reason Tri-Ad-locked knives have repeatedly survived extreme stress tests that destroy standard lockbacks and liner locks.
Frame Lock
Functionally similar to a liner lock, but the entire handle scale (rather than a thin liner beneath it) serves as the locking bar. This provides more contact surface and generally a more durable long-term lock, but requires more precise machining to fit correctly, which is why frame locks are less common on knives under $80.
Liner Lock
A thin metal liner inside the handle springs into place behind the blade tang when opened. It is the most common lock mechanism on production folders due to its low manufacturing cost, and it is reliable for normal use, though it ranks below frame locks and AXIS-style locks in stress testing.
Lockback
A spring-loaded bar along the spine of the handle catches behind a notch in the blade tang, holding it rigidly open until pressure is applied to a release point near the rear of the handle. It requires two hands to close safely and is one of the oldest proven locking designs in folding knife history.
Slipjoint (no true lock)
Traditional pocket knives use spring tension alone — a flat spring inside the handle creates resistance against the blade's tang, holding it open or closed without a mechanical lock bar. The blade can fold under hard spine pressure, which is why slipjoints are suited to light tasks like whittling rather than prying or hard use.