The pivot is the small mechanical junction where the blade rotates against the handle, and what sits inside it has a real effect on how the knife feels to open and close. Most pocket knives use one of two systems: phosphor bronze washers or ball bearings, either loose or held in a cage.
Pivot Systems Compared
| System | Opening Feel | Maintenance | Typical Price Tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phosphor Bronze Washers | Smooth, consistent | Simple, fewer parts | Budget to mid-range |
| Caged Ball Bearings | Very smooth, low friction | Moderate — bearings stay contained | Mid-range to premium |
| Loose Ball Bearings | Very smooth, low friction | More involved — bearings can scatter when disassembled | Premium |
How Each System Works
Phosphor bronze washers
A phosphor bronze washer is a flat, self-lubricating bronze alloy ring placed on either side of the blade at the pivot point, allowing the blade to rotate smoothly against the handle liners without metal-on-metal contact. This is one of the oldest and most proven pivot designs in folding knife history, appearing on everything from traditional slipjoints to modern liner lock EDC knives. It is simple, reliable, and easy to maintain since there are only two washers to account for during disassembly.
Ball bearing pivots
A bearing pivot replaces the flat washer with a ring of small ball bearings, which roll rather than slide against the contact surface. This generally produces a noticeably smoother, faster opening action with less perceived friction, which is part of why bearing pivots are popular on knives designed around fast flipper-style deployment. Bearings can be held in a cage (a retainer ring that keeps them evenly spaced and contained) or left loose, which is less common on production knives specifically because loose bearings are more prone to scattering during disassembly.
Which System Is in This Roundup
Most knives in this roundup use phosphor bronze washers, which remain the standard pivot system for production EDC folders across nearly every price tier, from the budget CRKT Drifter to the premium Benchmade 940 Osborne. Bearing pivots are more common on knives specifically designed around fast flipper deployment or marketed toward enthusiasts who prioritize opening smoothness as a primary feature, and appear more frequently on premium titanium-framed folders like the WE Knife Co. Banter.