Thank god the "It will do" mentality pervaded at the time!
It's the very reason Britain survived, Old Boy! Seriously though, look at the Spitfire Mk.IX, very much an "It'll do for now" solution.
The Luftwaffe (in the BoB) spent a lot of time and effort photographing, and then bombing, the wrong airfields.
Indeed they did, Terry; I've seen quite a few of the Luftwaffe pre-raid images from the collection of the RCAHMS in Edinburgh, but their post-raid images are few and far between, which meant they had no way of quantifying their results. This lack of post-raid information caused them to also bomb the wrong targets and often the same targets unintentionally.
I would still put forward night bombing of industrial targets (no one mentioned the indiscriminate bombing of cities as a solution - obviously didn't work) and airfields by the LW; they had the means to do it with some accuracy owing to their use of electronic direction finding equipment; Knickebein, X and Y Gerat. Resistance by British night fighters was minimal, so the bombers could have had a better chance of doing greater damage to Britain's war industry than they did by attacking during daylight hours.
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