As it represents the current middle-ground solution, with UKMO in close support, here's a closer look at the GFSP 06z's storm event:
This version of the charts best shows the sort of trouble that a particularly deep low could bring in terms of precipitation type; because there looks to be such deep cold to our NW as the storm develops, a strong one will pull a tongue of that in towards the low pressure center. This could bring a period of heavy snowfall given that with high precipitation rates and low pressure bringing the 850hPa level a bit closer to the surface, uppers not far below zero could be sufficient (let alone as low as -6*C as shown above). It depends on to what extent the strong winds counter the evaporative cooling effect (as snow melts, it takes in energy from the surrounding air and cools it).
This run then brings the warmer core of the low down across the areas that saw this tongue of cold air, bringing some spells of rain... so it's heavy back-end frontal snow followed by a bit of rain to make a mess of things - exciting to watch if the snow falls in the middle of the day (particularly given 40 mph wind gusts) as shown on this particular outcome, but no lasting snow on the ground.
The strongest winds are associated with the warmer core, and they look destructive:
Tree-troubling gusts there. The swathe of near-70 mph gusts then crosses the south during the following few hours.
What really heightens concern is that this type of intense storm formation, with a distinct 'conveyor' of warmer air curling into the low and meeting a cold tongue of air wrapping in to meet it, is the sort of setup that can produce a sting jet.
At this stage, adjustments in the storm track could change the game entirely, and really the above represents the most extreme outcome on offer from the op runs so far today.
The normal GFS shows an alternative in which the shortwave from the SW tracks further south and doesn't phase soon enough to produce such a system - we still get an intense low but it lacks the structure needed for a sting jet event. It also avoids bringing a second round of less cold air through the UK, so it's a relatively simple rain to snow transition, though with hardly any of the latter across England and Wales. All in all, a far less extreme outcome, though, still with a swathe of damaging winds to worry about, so still a severe weather event.
Due to ECM still having the low further NW than GFSP and UKMO, and the sheer extremity of the middle-ground outcomes, there's not really anything to justify calling any one solution as the most likely at this point in time... more runs needed!
In other news, GFSP is now being a big tease with the idea of a Scandi High arising in response to low heights reaching the Med. and the upstream pattern retaining enough amplification. We can never catch a break from these distant offerings can we?
This can only start to be taken with less than a truckload of salt if and when ECM treats the above storm system in the same sort of way as GFSP, UKMO and GFS.
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T-Max: 30.2°C 9th Sep (...!) | T-Min: -7.1°C 22nd & 23rd Jan | Wettest Day: 25.9mm 2nd Nov | Ice Days: 1 (2nd Dec -1.3°C in freezing fog)
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