There were other issues.
How do you aim the bombs?
A steep dive can be difficult, there are no air brakes, the bombs tend to slipstream.
The normal way was to set a second cross hair on a Revi 16 guns sight, dive on the target at a predetermined angle and pullup and release the bomb when the second cross hair is on target. The pullup is at a height determined by an alarm on the altimeter or perhaps by the stedometric range finder. Pilots needed good maths.
One answer was a toss bombing sight the TSA 2D. The pilot aims in a shallow dive with his gun sight. The bomb sight takes in air speed data, sink rate data from a variometer or radar altimeter and altitude from the altimeter or FuG 101a radar altimeter. When the target release solution is 'acquired' by the bomb sight a flasher and buzzer tells the pilot to pull up, during this time and accelerometer tracks the aircraft. The bombs are released automatically in their arc. It was in operational evaluation at the end of the war with KG51.
The sight was not ready for even ordinary Jabo fighter bombers at the time of the Normandy landings. One reason may have been that the Luftwaffe had preferred to wait for the more accurate TSA 2D than the earlier TSA 2. Was that a bad decision not in keeping with the Fuhrers directive to prepare for the invasion?
Fw 190A made some attacks using Werfer-Granate 21 rockets, also known as the BR 2. The fuel tank jettison being hastily rigged up as a fire button. A few landing craft were hit, This rocket was an adaption of the bombardment rocket that had been designed for an ballistic attack. Because it was spin stabilised it spun of 5 degrees to the side due to the magnus effect and this had to be compensated in the sight.
Rockets should have been ready as well as toss bombing sights.
Some Me 262 bombers did eventually received TSA 2D but I suspect the aircraft still needed air brakes.
The Me 262 as a reconnaissance aircraft would have had more dramatic effects than anything else. As it was it took several weeks before a Ar 234 over flew the Cherbourg Peninsula and revealed the size of the allied beachhead.