Perhaps this view could be replicated down the road. Not literally of course!!

On 7 March 1945, Sqn Ldr Evan Mackie of No. 80 Squadron RAF engaged a Fw 190 D‑9 in a fierce dogfight near Enschede. The latter aircraft was probably W.Nr. 400247 "Black 4", flown by Unteroffizier Otto Salewski of 10./JG 26. While climbing up to 8,000 ft, Mackie, who was in Tempest NV700/W2*A, had initially spotted the vapour trails of six to eight Focke‑Wulfs above him at about 15,000ft. Continuing to climb through patchy cloud, he and his squadron intercepted the "Doras" at around 13,000 ft as they were diving down to attack other Tempests of No. 122 Wing RAF. Mackie singled out Salewski, chasing him vertically down to 3,000 ft. For the next five minutes the two fighters duelled over the flat ("We were both leaving almost continuous wingtip trails" as Mackie put it), open countryside between Plantlünne and Rheine until Mackie, aided by the arrival of two more Tempests from No. 274 Squadron RAF, fired a one‑and‑a‑half‑second burst, with 30 degrees of deflection, from approximately 200 yards. Flames tailed back from the Focke‑Wulf’s cockpit and it crashed "in a mushroom of smoke and flame" north of Rheine near the village of Schüttorf. Salewski perished in what Mackie considered to be the hardest encounter of his career.
Artist: Garthe Hector