ok i was doing some research and it seems that my orange peacock is a OB peacock and my blue one is a Kenyi i think beacuuse i found one that looks like it...anyways to my questions i did some research and these fish seem compatible with my 2 cichlids i have
1.Lavender Bbuna or rusty cichlid
2.blue peacock.
3.Red top hongi
4.red zebra
5.sunshine peacock
6 yellow tail acei
and it was also saying a good mixing species for peacocks are the hapiochromis species.........
60 gallon tank correct ? how long (the most important dimension for africans is length, presuming adequate water volume) and how filtered ?
Mixing Mbuna with Aulonocara is not ideal - the Mbuna are generally more aggressive than the Peacocks, who can suffer a bit in terms of feeding & general stress as a result.
But you only have a couple of Peacocks in there right now correct ? So if you don't add more Peacocks, you could happily have a go at say the labidchormis caereulus (yellow lab), labidochromis hongi (red top hongi on your list), iodotropheus sperengae (rusty cichlid, or lavender mbuna on your list) and the Pseudotropheus Acei (yellow tail acei on your list).
Those are considered amongst the least aggressive Mbuna; only real problem I see what those stocked at the ratio of 1 male, 3 females each is that you will likely have hybrid fry between the two groups of labidochromis. If that bothers you (and remember you should never release hybrid fry from your system) choose one group only.
Or, you could equally decide you are doing a Peacock Tank, which you would stock at the same ratio of males to females. The main drawback to Peacocks is that the females are all unattractive and drab, but the Males are stunners. With Peacocks you would try and pick say 4 or 5 different species, again stocked at 1 male to 3 females or so. You almost certainly will end up with hybrid fry as aulonocara are very unselective breeders.
You can mix mbuna and peacocks but this goes against a lot of advice from very qualified and experienced fishkeepers. If you did this, take 3 of the Mbuna groups as discussed above, and find 3 or 4 tops Male Peacocks which are dramatically differently coloured from each other. You may very well end up having to remove from tank due to them not thriving so as always with cichlids and especially rift lake stocking mixes have a Plan B (rehome or different tank).
Your tank is not really big enough to stock the bigger haplochromine species.
Either way you need a ton more rockwork in there - two or three piles all the way up the back of the tank is good. Although it is of course your own personal taste entirely they will generally look better on natural looking gravel, or black sand, with rockwork and a very few plants, or none at all.