Mine is a Husky 5000 action.Its a slightly redesigned small ring long action that came in 7 mm Rem Mag.
IMO,the "beauty" attribute of the receiver is its light weight.
IMO,the best application for it would take advantage of that lightness.
The Boyds and Richards stocks are quite heavy due to all the resin gluing the plywood together.
Long ago I replaced the Husky trigger with a Canjar.A Timney is available.
I blueprinted mine.I surface ground the bedding surfaces,squared the receiver ring face.The locking surfaces in the receiver and on the bolt lugs were not well machined.I set them up,refaced everything lightly,then lapped in the lugs.
I put a Lilja # 3 barrel in it,Chambered 30-338.
I bedded it in a blind magazine Hi-Tec Specialties stock for a large ring Mauser.This stock is well made,and weighs 20 oz.
The bbl is fully free floated.I made steel pillars and bedded them in,initially,so the receiver and barrel were centered and free floated on nothing but the pillars.I used either a Krag or Rem 700 guard.
The original Cast aluminum guard/floorplate had snapped at the floorplate hinge pin when being pulled from a glassbed job in the original wood stock.Beware,they do snap very easy!Just pulling on the guard with two fingers did it.
I trimmed down the broken box ,thinned the walls,and used it for a shell to glue in the stock as mag box.
Then I went back and bedded the receiver,with the pillars being "master"
Given how light the rifle was turning out,and with consideration to the anticipated recoil of the 30-338,I compromised a bit and gained a few oz using Brownells Steel bed.
It came out a very nice tool.It shoots good,and is quite comfortable to carry for a rifle designed around trajectory matching the B+C reticle holds to 600 yds.