Hi,
I had initially refrained from answering to this question on purpose, but since you specifically asked me..
Reason for my refraining from answering is that I still find it beyond difficult to reliably sex my P. sp. "Typhoon" (let alone those I only know from pictures).
As a general remark: I don´t sex plecos by genital papilla, because on pictures you can never be sure that the papilla is actually fully shown (the fish can partly retreat it into the body cavity, which may fool you into seeing something that isn´t there).
Then, it would be important to know how long you have these fish.
If you only have them for a few weeks, signs visible in well conditioned fish may not be as obvious.
From the pictures you provided I (very tentatively!) would call them all males.
That judgment is solely based on head shape, because I could not find any other correlating secondary sexual differences in my fish. There may be differences in the thickness of the first pectoral fin rays, but I find that hard to discern on pictures (at least harder than for other genera like Hypancistrus or Peckoltia).
For your reference, I also add three pictures of P. sp. "Typhoon" which I am most certain about their sexes (but still far from certain!). This sexing is, by the way, not only based on these pictures, but also on some time keeping and observing them. So please don´t ask what exactly makes me giving these calls, to some degree it´s just instinct or "feels" right..
This fish I am most certain to be a male:
And this one I am quite certain is a female:
..so is this one (but not that certain):
Cheers,
Sandor
"What gets us into trouble is not what we don´t know.
It´s what we know for sure that just ain´t so."
--Mark Twain