wuzak
Captain
My point was that the inverted engine, motor cannon and landing gear geometry individually compromised the design. With that said, the engine and armament choice did have an effect on the landing gear. The motor cannon requires the propeller hub to sit further from the crankshaft so the barrel can clear the cylinders. On an inverted engine, this places the propeller shaft lower on the engine, meaning either the engine must be installed higher in the airframe or the landing gear legs made longer. The BF-109 appears to have chosen the latter.
I don't think it did.
The cannon barrel ran through the Vee in the engine. In the Merlin and V-1710 that space was occupied by the intake manifolds, and the rear blocked off by the supercharger.
If either the Merlin or V-1710 had been designed around a motor cannon, it is doubtful that the propeller shaft position would have needed to changed much.
In each case, the prop shaft is roughly centre of the frontal area of the engine.