So here are my two cents:
043 - looks like sable steel or possibly smoke pearl steel (aka dilute, or blue sable steel)
101 - smoke pearl steel; this is one that makes me wonder if there's silvering involved
552 - seems to be a pretty correct chinchilla, though I'd like to see its belly
813 and 009 could be wideband chins or STS - from these photos I wouldn't really be able to commit since I cannot see some of the more helpful parts of the rabbit, those being the belly and ear lining (though 813 seems to have pale inner ears). If they are steels, they will
most likely (though not always) have bellies roughly the same color as their backs; if they are chins, they will certainly have clear silver bellies, probably with darker undercolor.
346 could be a wideband blue chin or a blue STS; again, would need to get a clearer look at other parts of the rabbit to feel confident.
635 looks like a sable steel
When you combine chinchilla <cchd>, sable <cchl>, steel <Es> and wideband <w>, you really do sometimes create a puzzle, since the first two eliminate most or all pheomelanin production, leaving only shades of black and/or sepia; the first produces agouti markings and the second causes shading, and they are, to apparently varying degrees, co-dominant; and the third and fourth mess with the agouti markings and/or banding. I have mostly endeavored to keep sable and steel out of my lines because of this, but have dealt with sable in limited amounts in Satins, American Sables and Holland Lops, and have had all four alleles rear their heads in the Satins.
A "proper" chinchilla is an agouti that is completely and only shades of black/gray/pearl, with a clear ring pattern and no sepia tones (although kits often start out with rustiness across their shoulders and backs, sometimes extensively so, which molts out as they develop). Here is an example of good chinchilla ring color and pattern:
View attachment 36155
A "proper" sable is a self, with shading on the rabbit's extremities from black to sepia, and no rings. When you combine agouti with sable, you get what looks to my eye like a faintly off-colored or "rusty" chinchilla with shaded points. You should still be able to discern rings on the hairshaft, though they seem less clear, to me anyway, because there is less contrast between the dark and light bands. I don't have any photos but the rings are similar to what is pictured above. Combining agouti with
both <cchd> and <cchl> might give you the same effect, since there seems to be a battle between those two c alleles that results in only partial dominance, but I've not done that experiment.
The steel <Es> as you noted squashes the banding pattern up to the top of the hairshaft. (This looks different than the wideband <w>, which basically widens the middle ring, but doesn't really push the rest of the rings up to the top.) One tricky thing is that steel kits, being at their base agoutis, seem to go through a banded phase, at least in my barn.
Here is a GTS at 3 weeks with pretty typical coloration (sorry about the poor photos):
View attachment 36156View attachment 36157
and the
same kit at 4 weeks, going through a surprisingly dramatic (to me, anyway) "agouti phase":
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He ended up looking like the original 3-wk photos. I don't know if it just happens with this particular line (as I said, I've tried to avoid steel and this just popped out when I bred one of my "blacks" with an agouti), or if this is normal steel development.
And here is his belly color, which can really help in determining whether you have a steel or non-steel agouti:
View attachment 36165
The wideband gene <w>, which is supposed to be recessive, has sometimes appeared to be only partially so in my Satins. This is a squirrel, aka blue chinchilla, which I believe carries one copy of <w> based on her bands and her pedigree (she's young and just had her first litter so I haven't been able to test that):
View attachment 36160
Here's a comparison between hers and the correct pattern:
View attachment 36164View attachment 36161
Silver-tipped steels are made by removing the yellow pigments (via the chin or sable genes) on an otherwise GTS. So if your rabbits are a chin and a sable, you should not see any GTS kits. The gold-ish color on 635 I believe is due to the sable (eumelanin-derived sepia rather than pheomelanin-derived tan/orange).
Would love to see pictures of these kite as they grow, since the sable coloring, especially, goes through some interesting developmental phases. In normal (self) sables, the kits look pale bluish, then very "tipped" or "frosted" before they become chocolatey sepia.