Abu Bakr al-Bazzar: Trustworthy
Abu Hatim al-Razi: Truthful when he narrates from trustworthy narrators, but he narrates rejected hadiths from unknown narrators, so his narration is weakened by his narration from the unknown.
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: He is fine, but he used to make mistakes.
Ahmad ibn Shuayb al-Nasa'i: Trustworthy, and once: He is fine.
Ahmad ibn Salih al-Jili: He makes mistakes, and once: He is fine.
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani: He is fine, and once: He only has two hadiths in al-Bukhari as a supporting narrator.
al-Daraqutni: Trustworthy
al-Dhahabi: The Hafez, trustworthy, he used to travel.
Zakariya ibn Yahya al-Saji: Truthful, he makes some mistakes.
Uthman ibn Abi Shaybah al-Absi: Truthful, but he is inconsistent.
Uthman ibn Sa'id al-Darimi: Not like that
Muhammad ibn Sa'd Kathir al-Waqidi: Trustworthy, he makes many mistakes.
Authors of Tahrir Taqrib al-Tahdhib: Trustworthy, the Imams declared him trustworthy, and his narration from the unknown is sahih, and it is weakened by them, not by him, and Allah knows best.
Wakee' ibn al-Jarrah: He was not the one who memorized these long hadiths.
Yahya ibn Ma'in: Trustworthy, and once: He is fine.