I don't see any barring in the rooster, so if that is correct, all male offspring will be barred and all female offspring will not be barred.
The problem comes in that the way you tell whether they are barred at hatch is to look for a white spot on top of the head. If there is a white spot, the chick is male. If there is no white spot, it is female. There is no standard genetic make-up to an EE rooster and that one looks like a real cross. I don't know what color down the chicks will have.
If the chicks are a solid color, in this case probably black, then you can see the white spot. If the chicks are not colored to where you can see a white spot, then I don't consider them true sex links because you cannot tell at hatch. But any male offspring will be barred and any female offspring will not be barred. Once they start feathering out, you can tell.
It is possible the only barring you will be able to see is in tail feathers or other pattern colors if the main body of the male offspring is white. It just depends on the color and pattern genetics of that rooster.
Freedom is not the right to do what we want, but what we ought....Abraham Lincoln (Freedom carries responsibility)
The spirit of liberty is the spirit which is not too sure that it is right.....Judge Learned Hand (The more sure your are that your way is the only right way, the more likely you are wrong.)
Freedom is not the right to do what we want, but what we ought....Abraham Lincoln (Freedom carries responsibility)
The spirit of liberty is the spirit which is not too sure that it is right.....Judge Learned Hand (The more sure your are that your way is the only right way, the more likely you are wrong.)