Woodwinds
Some of the instruments that have a reed are the oboe, bassoon, clarinet, bass clarinet, alto sax, tenor sax, baritone sax, and probably others.
Welcome to the bass and baritone sax review section.
Yamaha
about four feet
The alto sax is generally not known as "an E flat sax", as a baritone saxophone is also in E flat.
French horn, trumpet, tuba, bar-sax (also part woodwind), baritone, euphonium (like baritone, but with straight top).
e
7 octaves
The low A baritone saxophone was developed by the American instrument maker Adolphe Sax in the mid-19th century. Sax, who invented the saxophone family in 1846, created various models, including the baritone saxophone, which initially played in B♭. The low A version emerged later as a response to the musical demands of players seeking a broader range in the instrument.
When Adolphe Sax was experimenting with Bass Clarinets, he accidentally invented the Baritone Saxophone in 1840.
any where from 1 to maybe 3
There are several: Flute, piccolo- my instruments Clarinet Bass Clarinet Basson- technically a double reed in the WW family Oboe- technically a double reed in the WW family Alto Saxophone Tenor Sax Baritone Sax Soprano Sax There may be more but those are the most common