GFS still brings snow showers across large parts of the UK Wednesday evening through Thursday and into Friday.
This happens as a result of the air mass being both a little colder and a fair bit more unstable than was seen early this past week. The most notable difference seems to be lower dew points. A benefit of having sourced it from an area of uppers of below -30*C over Canada on Tuesday, this cold air mass reinforced to some extent a flow coming in from the NE, having across the length of Greenland, on Wednesday.
The situation actually looks more positive for cold enough conditions across the south on Thursday or Friday (depending on which model you look at) than further north, as this is where the air mass remains the most 'pure' with the least mixing thanks to a fast flow around the western periphery of the low. Northern parts see the center of the low very close by which allows more mixing out of the cold air to occur.
...but will there really be as much shower activity across such a wide area as GFS suggests? Recent experience of (admittedly less unstable) cold NW flows suggests not, with showers tending to be fairly well scattered. On the other hand, the signal for showers across much of a 24 hour period from GFS means that even a hit-and-miss situation could still deliver something to the majority of places within the region.
It will be interesting to see how close to this initial assessment conditions end up being. For what it's worth, with an outcome close to the above, I'd expect many areas to see a cm or two Wed-Fri, though settling is not guaranteed. Lucky spots (happening to catch a particularly heavy shower or a chain of them) would probably see more than double that.
Originally Posted by: Stormchaser