Chance me at UCB, UCLA, & UCSD please

GPA UC weighted: 4.7
GPA UC Unweighted: 4.0
GPA UC Capped: 4.4

Current New SAT Score: 1380(720 Math, 660 Reading/Writing Combined)
SAT 2: 800 Math 2 760 Chemistry
APs: 5s on AP Lang, APUSH, Calculus, World History, 4 on Chemistry, 3 on Computer Science
EC’s: Computer Science Club Co-President, MESA club member 2014-2016, Chess Club member, (no sports), innovateLA Hackathon participant & leader
Ethnicity: Chinese
Award: National AP Honor with Distinction
Intended Major: Computer Science

Based on my relatively strong GPA but my relatively weak SAT score(and perhaps extracurriculars that I have), how much of a chance do I have at being able to go to Berkeley’s EECS, or UCLA’s Henry Samueli School of Engineering, or even UCSD’s Jacobs School of Engineering? Do I still have a good chance of being able to go into that major at these three schools with these stats?

Thank you for your time!

Gunguir

Also, if you guys need anymore information, please feel free to ask, as I really want to know(as precise as possible) how much of a chance I have here.

http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/what-my-chances/1903428-faq-uc-historical-frosh-admit-rates-by-hs-gpa.html

However, UCB EECS, UCLA CS, and UCSD CS are significantly more selective than the campuses overall. At UCB EECS and UCLA CS, you are either admitted to the major or not admitted at all. At UCSD CS, you may be admitted to the major, admitted to UCSD but not the CS major, or not admitted at all. If you enroll at UCSD but not in the CS major, it is extremely competitive to get into the CS major – recent quarters have required 4.0 or 3.9 college GPA to be admitted: http://cse.ucsd.edu/CappedMajor

UCB also offers L&S CS, where you apply to L&S, where selectivity is similar to the campus overall (since L&S is the largest division). All L&S admits are undeclared; entering the L&S CS major requires a 3.3 college GPA in the prerequisite courses: https://eecs.berkeley.edu/academics/undergraduate/cs-ba

Be sure to have safety options where you will be admitted, will not have difficulty getting into the CS major, and will not have any difficulty affording the net price.