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WRONG!!! I've had this happen before. I had a set of Splash silkies in a pen to gether and ever other egg that the hen layed was a white silkie. They were the only two in that cage for 1 year. So just because it lloks good on paper, nature has her own plans!
Each of your birds carries one copy of recessive white. So 25% inherit a copy from each parent and thus are white. There is no way to tell which of their offspring (another 25%) do not carry it versus the 50% who inherited only one copy. Recessive white is an OFF switch, preventing the formation of feather pigment.
If you pair these birds with different mates, you will eliminate the white offspring (assuming the new bird does not carry recessive white). However, about 50% of the offspring will have a copy of recessive white.
I'm well aware of this, I was a Biology major in college. My point being that you cannot say Splash x Splash = Splash and leave it at that, there are newbies who think that this is LAW! that there is not a chance for other variables that is all. I do not need a lesson in breeding & science. I KNOW what I'm breeding and understand it, just trying to explain that there are people reading these threads who don't. That is all.