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Sydney Camm began working on the Hurricane's successors, the Typhoon and Tempest, in 1937, before the war even started. He said he might have made the Hurricane faster by tweaking the wing, but he knew that war was coming and he didn't have time for much fine-tuning of the design. The very fastest Hurricanes ever built, some PR (photo-reconnaissance) versions, had a speed of 350 m.p.h., there was only so much that could be done with a plane with such a thick wing (and non-retractable tail wheel).
Why would anyone want to do that? If the RR Griffon engine had been produced in larger numbers during WWII I can think of all sorts of airframes more deserving of this powerful motor. The 618 Mustang Mk Is for instance.
Nothing prevents installation of British built Griffon engines in the U.S. manufactured Mustang airframe. Just as nothing prevented Packard built Merlin engines from being installed in British manufactured Lancaster bomber airframes.