The ridge is putting up more of a fight than expected... in fact the low seems to have ended up drifting a bit further east than anticipated as well.
The plume of very high moisture is only now starting to creep into the SE. Even there, it's only the northern edge that possesses any particularly impressive rainfall rates. Make no mistake - the moisture aloft is sufficient for 60-80mm in places today, but without the convection, it may as well be dry up there!
In the short term, it appears that proper thunderstorm type conditions will be restricted to areas east of Brighton or thereabouts, while The Solent and areas a little way NW of there may experience 'thundery rain' which looks heavy but generally falling short of torrential. It could turn out to be quite prolonged though, if the low and plume keep up this sluggish behaviour.
Through the afternoon, I suppose a few embedded cells are possible more generally across S. England, based on that mass just leaving France (east of the peninsula), but with so much change in steering over the past 6 hours, I'm not feeling bold enough to predict where exactly that will end up going!
Any notable breaks in the cloud are on the far side of that thing so probably out of reach for Southern England I'm afraid. A few breaks between the masses in The Channel could allow temps to reach into the low 20's though. Still an outside chance of 25*C or more based on GFS (which has 27*C IMBY... dream on!).
Originally Posted by: Stormchaser