I decided to go for an LCD TV for two reasons: my old 28" CRT TV was huge and was simply taking up too much space, and I wanted to be able to play on my Xbox 360 in high definition.
From a size point of view, this Toshiba is great. Super slim, quite light and its black and silver finish is easy on the eye too. It has plenty of connectivity, as you can see in the spec above.
I found the TV very easy to set-up and the Freeview tuner is very good. I can't get every available channel in my area yet, but those I can get come through very well and the built-in TV guide is impressive.
The picture is vibrant and colour reproduction is good - even blacks mostly look pretty convincing rather than adopting the blue tinge that some LCD TVs can suffer from. I have experienced some image ghosting, smearing and colour banding in apparently lower quality broadcasts and some DVDs. I'm not sure the response time on this screen is as good as it could be, but the majority of the time it seems to be OK.
I certainly agree with reviewer ILC that the TV seems to give a better image without the various built-in enhancers switched on. It's worth spending some time experimenting to see what you find best.
Although the 32LWT66 does not have additional speakers as standard, I have so far found the speakers in the set do a great job. Toshiba have included the SRS WOW sound system, and this coupled with bass boost can give a rich and satisfying sound.
Naturally, this set is HD ready and I haven't got Sky HD or anything like it so can't comment much on the high definition capability. My Xbox 360 image in HD looks very good though. On regular Sky and Freeview the picture is good but it does highlight just how poor Sky's transmitted picture quality can be on some channels at some times. It's acceptable but has made me look forward to the time when HD is more of a standard and cheaper.
This is a good value TV with plenty of HD connectivity for the future and a decent level of performance for now. Picture quality is not as good as I would like, but I guess that is at least partly down to the signal being pumped in, and my set came with one dead pixel - no big deal as it's not noticeable and well, well, well within Toshiba's acceptable dead pixel limit. Trust me, I asked them!
Oh, and the remote may appear to be a bit cheap, but it does a fine job.