In the Crown Court the judge must not, in any event, suggest that a majority is acceptable until after 2 hours and 10 minutes.
--this is from google search...
----this is for England and wales....I can't find info for scotland but I assume it's the same or similar.
That is for a majority verdict, as opposed to a unanimous verdict, and covers cases in England and Wales only.
In England we have to have, at the beginning, a unanimous verdict of 12.
After a certain amount of time, the 2 hrs 10 minutes that you have highlighted, the Judge can allow a majority verdict - which is usually 11 -1 or 10 -2.
In Scotland it doesn't work that way.
They have 15 Jury members and anything over 8 is an accepted verdict.
So, right from the start, the Jury can have any of the following results ;
14 - 1 / 13 - 2 / 12 - 3 / 11 -4 / 10 - 5 / 9 - 6 / 8 - 7
and any of these is accepted immediately as a valid verdict.
Therefore there is no call for what we term in England as a majority verdict.