My Husky is also the thumb-cut military action. Actually, that's what I wanted more than a solid walled commercial version. I contoured the trigger guard on mine and smoothed out the military floorplate. I'm not a fan of the extra screw holes, but I didn't want to go whole hog into a replacement set of bottom metal. I wanted to build it up myself as an old time gunsmith would have and I think I accomplished basically that. I also swapped out the trigger for a Bold from Brownells and set it all in a Wood-Plus pre-fit Mauser 98 stock, also from Brownells. I added an orange Pachmeyr medium pad to it for the classic look. Then we added cross-bolts and a pin (both 1/8" 416 stainless pilfered from the Old Man's knifemaking supplies) through the wrist of the stock. If you're doing this I highly recommend getting hold of a proper crossbolt mounting jig. I didn't have one and, though it worked out in the end, using the jig would have been much easier. We end-capped the crossbolt holes with African Blackwood and added a matching grip cap to cover the wrist-pin. If I was doing it again and had more time (read: had more patience) I would have rust blued it. But alas, the rust bluing season is short in the north (as is the supply of muriatic acid) so I cold blued it. Nothing stopping me from polishing it down again and rust bluing it in the future though.
I'm using 286 Norma RNs (maybe the old equivalent of the Norma Alaska bullet?) that I got from Why Not. The rifle has a fairly long throat so I wanted to use RNs to get the bullet closer to the rifling. I had used 286 TSX's but was only getting 2000 FPS with max Barnes data and 2200 with max NPT data. I consider Nosler data safe with pretty well any other bullet as I've found over the years that Nosler Partitions generate more pressure than any other bullet, likely due to the solid mid-section (A Frames and H-Mantles likely generate pressure like the NPT but I haven't got the experience with them to say for sure but I have seen extreme pressures when a NPT was substituted in a load with Speer Hot Cor data). But I digress. The TSX shot well enough but I couldn't get the velocity without really pouring the powder to it, and even then it was so much powder that the super-long TSX wouldn't seat deep enough to cycle through the magazine. Given the construction and toughness of the TSX I think that the 250 gr TSX is more than adequate for the 9.3x62. the 286 should be reserved for the 370 Sako and 9.3x64.
Again, I'm off track. I've got the Normas shooting into 1.5"-2" with irons at 100 yards so that's as good as I can ask for. I'm getting about 2350 with 59.5 gr (IIRC, haven't got my book in front of me) of RL15 on a -5 degree day (you have to love load development in December in Saskatchewan!). That load is over what Waters by 1 grain published but seems safe in my rifle, given what the Chrony is telling me. Should be just the ticket for moose or as a second rifle next year when I go back to Africa. As an aside, I'm using Lapua brass which I bought from Hirsch (after being referred there by Ed at VBull) and CCI Large Rifle Magnum primers. The Lapua brass was excellent stuff and I would wholeheartedly recommend it despite the higher cost. It fits perfectly in my 30-06 shellholder and came, apparently, annealed. A nice touch for factory brass.