The way I see it there is a problem with the question.
Assuming gas that is 1.92 heavier than air is just a mixture of products of the burning (that is N2 and SO2) problem is rather trivial to approach - ratio of SO2/N2 is trivial to express in terms of n (water at STP is a liquid and probably can be ignored). That gives two equations (ratio, apparent molar mass) in two unknows (N2 and SO2), just solve.
Trick is, you are being told "in excess oxygen", so the resultant mixture probably contains three components. As molar mass of oxygen is between N2 and SO2 it most likely means there is no unique solution to the problem (or more precisely: there is no unique solution for sure, but sometimes in such cases numbers give some limit on possible results, I doubt that's the case here).
Can be the wording is lousy and you will get a reasonable answer just by assuming no oxygen in the mixture.