Hello again
After Jutland, the Royal Navy painted the ships of the Grand Fleet in a lighter shade of gray again, which supposedly worked better to hide them in the typical foggy weather of the North Sea. The KGV-class ships had their searchlights replaced with bigger ones and relocated the aft ones on platforms around the aft funnel, which could be retracted into drum-shaped boxes. KGV had her foremast modified again, this time it became a proper tripod. The bridge structure of all three was built up and enlargened, and newer fire control gear was fitted. The 102mm guns in the hull forward were landed and their ports closed. Turrets A and Y (B and Y on KGV) were painted black with ranging scales, and range clocks were installed on the foremast and immediately in front of the aft CT. Flying-off platforms were installed as follows: All three received one on Turret B, KGV a second one on Turret Q and Centurion a second one on Turret X. In 1918, they looked (most likely) like this:
HMS King George V
HMS Centurion
HMS Ajax
Greetings
GD