The rationale behind locking in votes is to prevent "tactical downvoting" - more specifically, to prevent people from getting their reputation back after downvoting.
However, this comes at a huge cost: If I find an answer that seems to work and upvote it, only to discover an hour later that it is an ugly hack that terribly breaks something in a subtle way, I cannot downvote it anymore. Here's an example.
Can we please get this fixed? Not "refunding" the reputation for downvotes once the lock-in time has passed would achieve the desired goal without preventing the legitimate use cases. (Please make sure reputation for downvotes only deducted once if the same answer is repeatedly up- and downvoted).
Also, it has been correctly pointed out in the comments on the meta thread linked above that the reputation hit taken by tactical downvoting is insignificant. If someone doing it downvotes 4 answers and gains one additional upvote through it, he's made "profit" even with this protection system in place. Thus, it may be easier to just drop the lock-in.