the only way to figure this out involves crossing two "ghosts" (non tangerine ray hines hypos) together. keeping their offspring until adulthood and selecting 2, of opposite sex, that have the least amount of spotting.
assuming they are homozygous for ray hines carrot tail, breeding them to a wild type should produce all hypos. if not than you need to go back to the drawing board until you have 2 super hypos (a spotty super hypo and really nice hypo may look similar).
once you have confirmed you have two animals of opposite sexes that are both homozygous for ray hines hypo you will need to breed them to a normal. this should produce all ray hines hypos.
observe them as they reach maturity again. once they have, breed them and compare the offspring as they reach maturity.
im not a betting man but id bet the farm that there are three major phenotypes of the ray hines carrot tail.
a normal. no ray hines gene.
a hypo. one copy of the ray hines gene. reduced spotting in the bands.
a super hypo. two copies of the ray hines gene. extremely reduced spotting in the entire body.
if you cross ANY super hypo baldy to a normal you will not produce any super hypo baldies. they will have head spots, and spots in the bands.
i believe the confusion comes from breeding linebred hypo tangerines to super hypo tangerines. in this cross alot of the heterozygous offspring will appear to be homozygous. nice, orange hypos with hardly any spotting. "looks like a super hypo to me!"
than maybe those are bred to other things and some come out looking normal(er) because they dont have any copies of the ray hines gene but possess the lineage for reduced spotting, resembling ray hines hypos to some degree. ray hines blood DOES NOT mean they carry the gene.
well anyway... i still stand by what i believe. you can believe what you want. im done with this thread... at least for now.