Think he is more interested in the Spits than the bombers. The Bombers don't really matter. Could make it anyone of the birds that flew.
I know of one famous bomber attack involving a Spitfire. It might be a bit too famous. It involved a Pilot name Peter Pease. He was one of the upper class Brits who fought (and died) in the Battle of Britian. He was killed in an head on attack on a He-111 during the 15th of September. According to what I have read and heard, he dove into a solo attack on a formation of German Bombers near London with a Me-109 on his tail. Either the 109 or the front gunner in the He-111 got him 'cause the attack led to his death. Richard Hillary wrote about his intereactions with Pease (the two were very close) in his book, "The Last Enemy". I believe they were both in 603 Squadron. The following is a quote from the book where Hillary and Pease had a conversation about why the war is being fought. The scene is a train compartment in Scotland. It is considered a very good passage from the book.
" 'Well, Richard,' he said, 'you've got me at last, haven't you?'
'I don't know if I can answer you to your satisfaction, but I'll try. I would say that I was fighting the war to rid the world of fear - of the fear of fear is perhaps what I mean. If the Germans win this war, nobody except little Hitlers will dare do anything... All courage will die out of the world - the courage to love, to create, to take risks, whether physical or intellectual or moral. Men will hesitate to carry out the promptings of their heart or brain because, having acted, they will live in fear that their action may be discovered and themselves cruelly punished. Thus all love, all spontaneity, will die out of the world. Emotion will have atrophied. Thought will have petrified. The oxygen breathed by the soul, so to speak, will vanish, and mankind will wither.' "
Hope it helps.