Locked Track Constraint

The Locked Track constraint is a bit tricky to explain, both graphically and textual. Basically, it is a Track To constraint, but with a locked axis, i.e. an axis that cannot rotate (change its orientation). Hence, the owner can only track its target by rotating around this axis, and unless the target is in the plane perpendicular to the locked axis, and crossing the owner, this owner cannot really point at its target.

Let us take the best real-world equivalent: a compass. It can rotate to point in the general direction of its target (the magnetic North, or a neighbor magnet), but it cannot point directly at it, because it spins like a wheel on an axle. If a compass is sitting on a table and there is a magnet directly above it, the compass cannot point to it. If we move the magnet more to one side of the compass, it still cannot point at the target, but it can point in the general direction of the target, and still obey its restrictions of the axle.

When using a Locked Track constraint, you can think of the target as a magnet, and the owner as a compass. The Lock axis will function as the axle around which the owner spins, and the To axis will function as the compass’ needle. Which axis does what is up to you!

If you have trouble understanding the buttons of this constraint, read the tooltips, they are pretty good. If you do not know where your object’s axes are, enable Axis in Properties ‣ Armature ‣ Viewport Display. Or, if you are working with bones, turn on the Axes button in the Armature menu’s Display panel.

This constraint was designed to work cooperatively with the Track To constraint. If you set the axes buttons right for these two constraints, Track To can be used to point the axle at a primary target, and Locked Track can spin the owner around that axle to a secondary target.

This constraint also works very well for 2D billboarding.

Options

Target

Data ID used to select the constraints target, and is not functional (red state) when it has none.

To

The tracking local axis, i.e. the owner’s axis to point at the target. The negative options force the relevant axis to point away from the target.

Lock

The locked local axis, i.e. the owner’s axis which cannot be re-oriented to track the target.

Important

If you choose the same axis for To and Lock, the constraint will no longer be functional (red state).