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A well-made liner lock is a beautiful thing. The action is smooth, the lock is very strong, and it can be opened and closed one-handed. However, it is easy for the knifemaker to make a mistake on a liner lock. Many common mistakes can result in the lock accidently unlocking, and this is a serious threat to fingers. Below are some of the tests we recommend a potential buyer try on a liner lock. Keep in mind that many of the factory knives easily pass all the tests below, while many knives from custom makers -- including those lauded in the knife rags -- often don't pass. Test your knives, don't assume the more expensive knife has the more secure lock-up!
One caveat is that the second of A.T.'s suggestions, the "palm-on-spine" and "whack-the-spine" tests, are a bit controversial. We both feel that a blade should never close due to palm pressure, and a moderate whack on the spine shouldn't make a blade fold up either. Some makers say that a knife in normal use does not ever get whacked on the spine, so this test is not real-world. You can decide for yourself how secure you think the lock should be.
A.T. Barr's Tests:
Great tip: Also, if your liner lock has a sloppy lock-up, sometimes you can help it by snapping the blade open and then half-way hard striking the blade (try to close it) on it's tang. That will help seat the Titanium liner to the tang of the blade. If that does not work, send it back to the maker. Be careful when you do this. If the blade does disengage, the blade will hit your knuckle. A number of rec.knife readers have reported good results using this tip.
Joe Talmadge's Tests:
Open knife, then thumb the lock aside (blade is still open). Wiggle the knife back and forth. If the blade has *any* play at all, that's a bad sign. It might just be that the pivot is too loose, so tighten the pivot until there is no more side-to-side play, and then make sure the action is still acceptable. Sometimes a knifemaker will have a bad action, and then make it appear smoother by loosening the pivot too much.
On top of that, I do the "white knuckle" test, which many makers also fail. Making believe I'm under stress, I grab the knife in a very firm grip, letting the flesh of my fingers sink in and around the liner to whatever extent this happens. Now the question is: will small movements unlock the lock (if a small movement moves the lock AT ALL, assume it can unlock it)? If the lock is too loose or too high relative to the handle scales, a knife that passes the other tests might fail this. I made an expensive folder from a well-known maker fail this way. I sent it back to him and he fixed it to my satisfaction. That is why I like the AFCK-style handles that do not give easy access to the lock via a cut-out -- I'd rather it be a little harder to unlock than to unlock accidently under weird conditions.
Bob Kaspar recommended a torque test as well, which is a test many liner locks fail. You want to open the blade and then torque it while applying pressure against the spine. The lock should not fail simply because the blade is being torqued a bit. I do this test by sticking the blade through something hard, a few layers of strong cardboard or wood, and then torquing the blade while trying to shut it.
Source: rec.knives Newsgroup December 1998
Jarrellyn Martin
479-631-0055