The vote-lock does not make any sense. From this answerFrom this answer:
The primary reason is to prevent "tactical downvoting". That is, downvoting the other answers on a question to get yours to rise to the top and, presumably, attract more upvotes. Then, once your answer has enough of a lead, undownvote those other answers to prevent the "hit" on your own reputation.
There are two odd points in this explanation:
If I haven't posted an answer to the question, downvoting will not offer me any advantage. So why does the system forbid undoing a mistaken vote in that case?
If I were to engage in tactical downvoting, I would not care about reversing the downvotes. A single answer upvote allows a user to downvote 9 others while still showing a profit. I would not even notice the locking feature.
So it’s time to evaluate what this feature sacrifices (the ability to revert a vote placed in error) and what it offers (inadequate protection against—at least this kind of—abuse).