I'd say that is probably right. If its from a HT it'll almost certainly be from a 308 manual HT or 350 HT.
3.08 Salisbury in a HT (which a 6/69 set of gears almost certainly will be if original) was only available as the
economy option behind
308 manual on V8 Belmont ute or van, V8 Kingswood ute, sedan or wagon, V8 Monaro or GTS and V8 Premier sedan or wagon. The standard driveline on all of these if you optioned 308 was M21 and G88 (3.36 LSD Salisbury) which given how rare optional rear axles were would make it like 1 in 50 cars or something like that.
3.08 salisbury was also the economy rear axle on GTS350, but it was also the standard rear axle on GTS350 if M35 Powerglide was optioned.
Given how rare optional rear axles were, even with how few HT GTS350 auto were built I reckon that is the most likely source.
If the gears were built later and ended up in a HG it is slightly different as HG GTS350 were all basically standard with G94 3.08 Salisbury (some early HG GTS350 manual had 3.36 standard like HT), and 3.36 became the performance rear axle for both HG GTS350 transmissions (there was no 3.55 like HT).
Unlike HK (other than July 1968 production) where 3.08 Salisbury was the economy rear axle on HK V8 auto GTS there was no 3.08 Salisbury economy option for HT 307/308 auto GTS. It was 3.36 standard and nothing else, although I guess like HK 307 auto GTS it may have been possible to special retail order a 2.78 banjo if you really wanted to. The rest of HK-HG (other than Brougham) saw 2.78 banjo as the standard rear axle behind 307/308 auto with 3.08 banjo or 3.36 Salisbury as alternate economy options.
Edited by user Friday, 8 October 2021 1:06:48 PM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified