Well, we sure have been treated poorly by most of the operational models these past 48 hours now haven't we?
Talk about small-scale details throwing spanners into the broader-scale pattern (Azores High extending NE to Scandinavia)! Essentially we have GFS in particular looking to wedge a cut-off low in between Azores and Scandinavian highs such that the broad picture is almost as it would have been anyway, but with a small region being markedly different... a region containing the UK, because how could it not be that in the mid-range GFS output?
So I find myself looking for what we need to happen in the shorter-term in order to score something akin to the ECM 00z run instead.
Here are the 'Big Three' arranged side-by-side.
What we see is that GFS and UKMO have the small low west of the UK in an elongated shape such that it more or less resembles an extension of the deeper trough near Iceland, but ECM has this low as a distinctly separate feature - pretty much cut-off from the main Atlantic jet stream.
This is crucial because the cut-off means interaction between the low and the deeper trough to the north doesn't occur over the following 24 hours, which is when the latter is well-positioned to not only exploit the resulting enhanced temperature gradient (it has cool polar maritime air on its side, while the small low has some tropical continental; much warmer) and intensify, but also guide that thermal gradient such that it pumps up a section of the jet stream running NW-SE and passing a little way SW of the UK. This means that the strengthened low is driven SE and over the UK. At this point, upstream developments cause the main Atlantic jet stream to resume a SW-NE orientation and, like a meander in a river being severed, this leaves the aforementioned low wandering aimlessly around the UK in the case of GFS. This did seem particularly bad though, with GEM showing a plausible alternative in which the low soon drifts south into Europe while blocking becomes strong between the mid-Atlantic and Scandinavia.
With the interaction delayed to the following day as per the ECM 00z, the low is not as well-placed to deepen, and the fact that it's further northeast means that even if it does move SE, it misses the UK, leaving the door open for the Azores High to build in. The realignment of the Atlantic jet as mentioned above then works in our favour rather than against.
So the main point to take away from all that is - we need that little low to be as far south and independent from the Atlantic trough as possible in the 3-4 day range. All eyes on the 12z in hope of seeing such amendments from GFS, GEM and UKMO so that we may escape the extraordinary misfortune that their 00z runs suggested!
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