Ok - so a bit of consistency starting to appear now. Many of the main points have been hinted at for a while though to be fair.
Looks like anywhere north of a line from Aberystwyth to Colchester isn't likely to see much from this, until you get back into the showery regime futher north again.
Within this southern zone, it currently looks like the pivot is also 'stretching the front' reducing the intensity east of the Solent. West of this is best - so South Wales, southern Cotswolds and Salisbury Plain down towards the New Forest looking like getting the highest totals. I think these might be in the 10cm realm.
To the east of this, I still think that the Weald, South Downs and Surrey Hills could still do well. There may not be front left, but neither is it moving fast, and any snow will be falling onto an already present base layer and frozen ground. Could be in the 5cm realm.
Chilterns and Essex might get a couple of cm.
Layered on top of this base picture are the variables of air being drawn in from the east from the Thames estuary, which may or may not be a big factor, undercutting and giving a boost to frontal activity... dependent too on whether any minor lows run east ahead of the main low. Any boost from these or resulting compression of the isobars could increase totals in this south-eastern sector. I could see an amber extending eastwards later, but these additional factors mean it's all less certain than the sw, where the front is literally knocking on the door already.
Originally Posted by: eddied