Point being, you likely shouldn’t be messing with the lever much. You set the friction where you need and leave it. Shouldn’t need to “release it.”
Yes, I know. I'm just some guy with probably some terrible technique but if I tighten the bipod, shoot a whole session, and then go to release the lever, it takes some effort (more than I, and others, think it should). The bipod is neither flopping from side to side nor so tight that it can't be moved. Also, taking off a taper mounted silencer causes the bipod to twist to one side so I then have to turn the lever from a different position than is otherwise optimal (over the rifle, bipod off the rifle, etc). I get it, you think I shouldn't have the bipod so tight but I don't have it tight enough that I can't still can pivot the rifle in the prone position.
The reason I bought the bipod is I wanted a durable bipod that could be set to loose when I wanted it loose and tight when I wanted it tight without shooting loose or tightening (on its own) when pivoting. For the most part that's true but the lever is short enough that it is hard tighten and to release. You're free to disagree with me but I have somewhat high expectations when I'm over $500 deep into a simple bipod (bipod, spiked feet, and mount).
I work in manufacturing and sometimes end users use a product in a way that wasn't originally envisioned (or intended), that doesn't necessarily mean they're wrong, it just means the manufacturer didn't think of everything. Maybe TBAC would like to make an accessory longer lever to sell? I assume they want to make some money. I'm not scared of another $25.