Never heard that one -- they both had 8 X .303 cal. Brownings when originally designed until the Spit moved up to 2 X 20mm Hispano's and 4 X Brownings (20 mm more effective against Jerry bombers) ... you're only talking a few feet in the "spread" of the Brownings in Spitfire vs Hurricane -- sooooooooooooo ... if you are a good shot, you're a good shot.
Not sayin' it's not true -- just never heard that particular preference in the Brit fighters. Most first-person histories I've studied preferred the Spitfire for it's performance ... but there was the occasional die hard who liked the Hurricane. And the A-4 ....
The reference was Sir Douglas Bader, who flew them both, in his book
Fight for the Sky. Also, apparently the 20mms had jamming problems when they first came out, too. Though they eventually did make both Spits and Hurricanes with 4x20mm loadouts. Bader's book recounts a kill by the latter as essentially causing the German to just disintegrate in midair . . .
Although for sheer WWII firepower, I'd take a P-47 and 8 Ma Deuces any day . . .
Edit: There's an interesting concept in the Wikipedia article on Group Captain Bader. For those who didn't know, he lost his legs in a crash pre-WWII and had to fight to get back on active duty with artificial ones. Apparently, some people are making the claim that this gave him an advantage in a fight. In other words, Gs pull blood down into your legs. Being as he had no legs to begin with, his G-tolerance was thus increased over his more able bodied brethren.
Let's hope NAMI doesn't get any ideas . . .
