That Euro/UK ridge depends so much on what takes place in the 5-7 day range, during which there is so much uncertainty upstream from the UK that I wouldn't put much faith in any output beyond that period at least as far as the Atlantic pattern is concerned.
Take the day 5 ECM and UKMO charts for example:
ECM (left) has the low in the far-western N. Atlantic in the current consensus position, but UKMO shows that this is not yet nailed on, with the low further SW.
As this evolves further, we see GFS and GFSP driving the jet NE while ECM drives it more E, despite that low being in the same sort of position on day 5. This is due to large differences in how the U.S. pattern evolves on day 6:
GFSP (left) has a shallow low N. of Florida and a weak ridge to the north of that. ECM (right) has a much stronger low and ridge combination. The strong ridge on the ECM run keeps the Florida low on a path a bit further south than GFSP's solution, and more importantly, takes the momentum out of it, causing it to become slow moving west of the Azores with a ridge ahead of it for day 10 - a good way to draw the Euro High west again.
GFSP lets the low continue on east, locking the Euro High in place as it rides up the NW'rn flank. Only after it has passed can the upstream Pacific/U.S. amplification begin to show its hand (poorly shown on the 00z op run as that low from Florida parked NW of the UK - among the worst possible outcomes. No such issue on the 06z).
I'm going to focus on the 5-7 day range until these upstream issues are resolved, though I will an eye on the powerful East Pacific ridge and associated U.S. amplification from around day 9 or 10, as that's such an important piece of the puzzle for the turn of the year. For what it's worth, the super-strong UK Highs seen on some recent GFSP runs represent a 'slow burner' response that could just be a prolonged spell of increasingly cold anticyclonic conditions. It would be an interesting position to be in while waiting for the strat. driven impacts next month.
As a final comment, the difference in the arrangement of features in the Atlantic between ECM and GFSP, while notable in terms of the UK outlook going forward, aren't actually that large as far as conditions in the next week is concerned - there is low uncertainty there, with the only likely variations being just how quickly the NW flow next weekend is cut off and then how soon milder air arrives from the SW (UKMO has the slowest outcome in both cases).
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