Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 926 Threads: 74
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Location: Essex
The letters align and they are deeper at the top edge. Both S have a thicker top stroke. I think both AUSN and SLN must have been set together in a tool and stamped. The numbers however have clearly been individually stamped.
The backwards N may have come from a set used to raise letters from the back (such as the N of No.)
Regarding the need for SN at all, are the springs stiffer for the saloon? If the majority of cars were originally tourers, you'd only need to know when a saloon chassis was being built up.
All surmised. No facts in fact!
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 3,393 Threads: 106
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Location: Darkest Bedfordshire
Yes, discarding my wilder theories I'd guess EX was for export, on a production line you need a big clear indication when something comes along that requires any different spec parts. (Does the pool of vehicles exhibiting the marks support this idea?)
Also if bodyless cars were being shipped the recipient would need to be able to clearly distinguish between any variants (saloon vs tourer, for example).