Abu Hatim al-Razi: When he got old, he changed, so whatever was presented to him he read, and whatever he was prompted with he accepted. He was more accurate in the past. He used to read from his book. And once: Trustworthy.
Abu Hatim ibn Hibban al-Busti: He mentioned him in al-Thiqat.
Abu Zur'a al-Razi: Whoever missed Hisham needs to leave ten thousand hadiths.
Abu Ali al-Asbahani al-Haddad: Famous for his transmission, eloquence, narration, knowledge, and understanding.
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: Rash, light.
Ahmad ibn Shu'ayb al-Nasa'i: There is nothing wrong with him.
Ahmad ibn Salih al-Jili: Trustworthy. And once: Truthful.
Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani: Trustworthy, reciter. He became old and started to be prompted, so his old narrations are more accurate.
al-Daraqutni: Trustworthy, a great scholar. And once: Trustworthy, intelligent.
al-Dhahabi: Sheikh of the people of Damascus, their jurist, their preacher, their reciter, and their hadith scholar.
Salih ibn Muhammad al-Jazara: He takes notes on hadith, and does not narrate what he does not take notes on.
Abdullah ibn Muhammad al-Farhazdani: He used to be prompted with everything, whatever his narration was.
Abdan ibn Ahmad al-Ahwazi: There was no one like him in the world.
Muhammad ibn Muslim ibn Waara: He used to sell hadith.
Muslim ibn al-Qasim al-Andalusi: He criticized him, and he is acceptable in hadith, trustworthy.
Ma'n ibn Isa al-Qazzaz: His weakness is that he may have been prompted with hadiths, so he accepted them.
Yahya ibn Ma'in: Trustworthy. And once: Very intelligent. And once: Not a liar.