Oh, for the flip-side:
"I lead the squadron behind the Messerchmitts and blew up their leader with my first burst, before attaching myself to his wingman who must have been a novice as he took little evasive action, and notwithstanding my cannons jamming, I peppered him with my two machine guns from minimal range until my DeWilde set him on fire.
He struggeled into cloud cover where I lost him, and maybe he eventually got home, but I thought more likely, as the boys did, that he joined his leader in the mountains below."
Anthoney Bartley, 29 dec 1942, 111 sqn leader.
One victim is confirmed, Gunther Eggebrecht II Jg51, shot down and wounded.
So, the cannons quickly blew up a plane, but yet the humble 303's still managed to pepper another one.
Well, the DeWilde made a lot of difference, of course.
BTW, the cannon jams at that time were largely due to lack of maintenance, - lack of groundcrew lead to the pilots reloading their own guns, which they were not trained for.
Bartley had 2 303's removed in order to lighten the plane.
So, he kept the other two, just in case.