I don't think you will have a problem.
Barring and gold/silver are on the Z (sex) chromosome, as you know. So are slow/fast feathering, sex-linked dwarfism, and light/dark skin (Id, for "Inhibitor of dermal melanin.) If you had dwarfism you'd probably know, feathering speed might matter to you, and I haven't seen you mention leg color. The other genes on the sex chromosome are one's I'm happy to ignore, because it either doesn't matter (eye color) or isn't found in commercial chickens (wingless?!).
Because a female only has one Z chromosome, she passes everything on it to each of her sons.
But since a male has two Z chromosomes, sometimes the chromosomes can swap parts with each other (sorry, that's a sloppy way to put it, but I think it's close to correct.)
Barring and silver/gold are far enough apart that they do not act linked, even though we know they must both be on the Z chromosome. So a male who's heterozygous for barring and for silver can pass them to his own chicks in any combination, at roughly equal rates.
Silver/gold is closely linked to slow feathering, and barring is linked to dark skin, but that may not matter to you.
I got the linkages from here:
http://www.edelras.nl/chickengenetics/linkages.html
The numbers for "map unit distance" stand for 1% chance of crossing over becoming linked the other way). So a distance of 10 makes a 10% chance, while a distance of 50 makes a 50% rate which is the same rate as random chance. You can pretty much ignore the "linkage" in those cases, unless it's on a female's only Z chromosome.
(I've read that some of the information on that chart may be inaccurate, because it's based on old research and some things have been discovered or better understood since, but I keep referring to it because I haven't found a better one.)