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The whole idea of the Beaufighter was that it could be made quickly and easily using Beaufort parts and tooling without having to go back to square one and starting over. It did cut some time off the design/development but perhaps not as much as they hoped.
The British design and experimental shops were stretched thin, very thin during the 30s and the war years which is why development often took so long, Having just about every company submit a proposal for just about every requirement didn't help (an exaggeration but really, 9 different aircraft proposed for the Jan 1939 heavy bomber specification?) as each proposal was accompanied by a set of drawings, sometimes a model, and estimated weights, CG, performance estimates and so on. The were not just quick sketches on an envelope with a few hasty calculations. And some of those proposals had several different engine options. each of which required preliminary estimates/calculations.
It was probably beneficial for Beaufighter that Beaufort was over-designed for a bomber? On the other hand, Bristol does not have to turn the bomber base into a heavy fighter.
Nite that A-W making a 4 engined bomber means they don't do Whitley, and very likely not the Ensign, so there is a lot of workload & resources saved both for design shop and for tooling up for production. Strangling Botha in the crib (cruel the man I am) also frees resources to do something else.
There is a terrifying thought. Cancel the Beaufort and design a large twin fighter using the Taurus engine like the Gloster twin. The Taurus does it's historic high dive into a damp sponge and Bristol is scrambling franticly to change the design to take Hercules engines in late 1939/early 1940 and the Beaufighter misses it's introduction as a radar equipped night fighter.
Not needed as the British have plenty of radarless Defiant night fighters in 1940/41![]()
Beaufighter didn't do much of the work until the real BoB ended (per Wikipedia: On 25 October 1940, the first confirmed Beaufighter kill, a Dornier Do 17, occurred.[10] ). The next possible time for Germans to make the actual major threat to the UK by bombing is due by Spring of 1941, unless Germans do a stupid strategic mistake or two...
Between the radar-outfitted Defiant (historically in second half of 1941), those without radrars (yes, not ideal), Blenheim with Merlins or he historical type, earlier Mosquito, and clean-sheet 'Beaufighter' there is a lot of night fighting material to help out with the historical Beaufighter out of picture.
Aircraft size of Gloster twin (that was size of Me 210) would've been great for night fighting.