Twin turrets for all the ships is the short answer.
Now the longer one. First, the nature of the drawings:
When a design is first proposed (sometimes in response to new formal Staff Requirements, sometimes simply to put forward ideas for developments of existing designs) the proposal may be accompanied by drawings which may be drawn by hand by a Constructor, or by a draftsman. Both are typically a few inches long, and may be approximately to scale, but they do no more than indicate the general layout of the proposed ship. The design is then developed by discussion in an Admiralty Committee, with a view to putting it forward for Board approval. During this stage sketch designs are prepared in more detail, usually to a scale of 1/16in to a foot (in 1918!). The resulting drawings (3 to 5ft long) depict a ship the positions of whose component parts are known accurately enough to be sure that the ship will float level. The drawing Hood posted on p2 of the "pre-Leander" Never Built thread is an example of a 1/16in =1ft drawing reproduced on a Warship page (and not very well scanned long ago by me!) It is however not necessary at that stage for the exact sizes, final positions and shapes of items like gun turrets to be known. Those may indeed change to an extent which requires these drawings at this "sketch design" stage to be redrawn. If and when the design is approved by the Board for construction, there follows a period of some months during which detailed "as-fitted" drawings (usual scale 1/4in = 1ft) are produced to govern the actions of the builders.
Secondly, in the particular case of these battleships, it appears that all (L,M,N and K,J,I,H and G to list them in order) progressed to the sketch design stage. At that stage at first glance the L designs had their secondary armament in positions which look like the Revenge class casemates [see the recent Never Built designs thread re the Royal Sovereign designs T1 and W1 whose original drawings are a few inches long in Tennyson d'Eyncourt's Notebook]. Others had their positions indicated by circles. Examination with a lens of the drawings reproduced across a single page of Warship No2 [article by NJM Campbell] including the L class, shows that all of them were to have "twin 6in BL guns", which is written alongside them though only crosses or circles appear on the diagrams. To the best of my knowledge, there was no twin 6in mount in existence. With such a mount being required for these ships, its development would be placed with the major gun makers (Armstrongs, Vickers) and design work would begin at the time of production of the first ship sketch designs, and could well (in fact did) take several years. Ship and gun design work went on in parallel, but it is clear that the post WWI capital ships were all intended to have twin 6in secondaries.
Only the G3 design advanced so far as to be ordered. For that design, "as-fitted" plans were prepared, showing the secondary armament layout in twin turrets. (Those plans also showed AA armament - 10-barrelled pompoms - guns and mountings never actually produced with more than eight barrels, only appearing for trials at the end of the 1920s)
For a parallel example, in the 1930's proposed destroyer armament (twin 4.7in mounts) showed great weight increases between the times when their installation was proposed and when building the ships actually started. It was hoped these would be ready for the 1936 ships, including a 62lb shell, but neither appeared until the J and L classes laid down from the end of 1937 with the heavier shell gun ready for only half the L class laid down in 1939. HMS Hereward tested the twin 4.7in mounting in January–March 1937.
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