Now that I've received some extra information, I'll restart the Jutland timeline with slightly more historical evidence. This has a pyrrhic German victory with better conditions for the Germans.
Part 1
At about 3p.m. on 31 May 1916,Hipper’s Battle cruisers had been detected by the 1st Light Cruiser Squadron although it was at 3:22 p.m. that Hipper sighted the British Battle cruisers but due to the direction of the prevailing winds Beatty did not identify Hipper for several minutes. Beatty continued to advance towards Hipper and eight minutes later the Lutzow opened fire on HMS Lion following a sharp turn to the south within a minute Lion and the rest of the Battlecruisers assembled opened fire.
The 5th Battle Squadron however, had not seen Beatty’s orders to turn south and was now well behind the faster moving Battlecruisers but their massive 15 inch Guns and greater range would soon come back into play. The German Battlecruisers had advantage of the weather gauge with their smoke being blown clear while the British had it blowing across their decks towards their targets and within a few minutes HMS’ Lion, Princess Royal and Tiger had all been hit with only crack shot HMS Queen Mary landing a reply on the Germans. [Taken from 'Room 40's Greatest Triumph]
All of a sudden, catastrophe struck the British. At approximately 4:00 p.m., a shell from Lutzow detonated on HMS Lion's Q Turret. In the scenario, every member in the turret made cordite arrangement errors and the fire caused by the shell left everybody dead or crippled. With nobody willing to assist the wounded men after an explosion and fire following, the fires spread and by 4:20 P.M., the Lion had detonated with the loss of Admiral Beatty and virtually every crew member on board, with some 15 barely escaping to become prisoners of the Germans.
This is the pod used until further notice. HMS Indefatigable and Queen Mary explode as historical.