Frankie,
Your weapon was made in July of 2002 based on the GOK date code. On this site you can search for Steyr Date Code. If there is no SteyrArms stamp then it was imported by some individual. Possibly a US soldier.
Stay away from Blazer aluminum cased ammo, UMC, S&B. Winchester white box WBB is used by a lot of people. Federal American Eagle, Hornady, Buffalo Bore, and others apparently work well. YMMV.
I would recommend you do a complete detail strip of the weapon and let the parts soak in mineral spirits for about 20 min. Then carefully dry each one and make sure there is no cosmoline left on them. Next carefully polish the trigger bar and function module where they touch. When you reassemble the sear and post, make sure the rounded ends of the pins are to the left side, and make sure they don't stick out to rub on the trigger bar. When you put the extractor back in, use a 1 gal. ziploc bag or equivalent to catch parts if they fly.
Your weapon was made in July of 2002 based on the GOK date code. On this site you can search for Steyr Date Code. If there is no SteyrArms stamp then it was imported by some individual. Possibly a US soldier.
Stay away from Blazer aluminum cased ammo, UMC, S&B. Winchester white box WBB is used by a lot of people. Federal American Eagle, Hornady, Buffalo Bore, and others apparently work well. YMMV.
I would recommend you do a complete detail strip of the weapon and let the parts soak in mineral spirits for about 20 min. Then carefully dry each one and make sure there is no cosmoline left on them. Next carefully polish the trigger bar and function module where they touch. When you reassemble the sear and post, make sure the rounded ends of the pins are to the left side, and make sure they don't stick out to rub on the trigger bar. When you put the extractor back in, use a 1 gal. ziploc bag or equivalent to catch parts if they fly.