A:AnswerGreat question. Funny enough, my old TV stand was *exactly* the width needed to hold this TV in place. It's 29" wide. I think you would want something that was 30" or wider just to play it safe.
A:AnswerIt has an optical cable port, which is what most sound bars use. It also has a single port headphone jack, and with a splitter, you could plug that into your Stereo.
A:AnswerThe online guide is easy to use - www.tv.toshiba.com You can either scan for channels available or manually add all the channels you want. Check out the guide for step by step instructions.
A:Answeryou will need a power converter or better yet log on to bestbuy see if the have a store in the Philippines and buy it on line and have it delivered that way you don't waste money shipping a tv that is designed to be used in the USA
A:AnswerThe TV does have RCA inputs; it's actually a combo component/RCA input. There is a product photo which shows this. The leftmost of the combo inputs is green and is where you would plug in the yellow RCA plug; the remaining audio white and red get plugged in on the right side of the combo jacks.
A:AnswerThe TV does not include wall-mount brackets, but it has the 4 mounting holes so you can use one. Our TV was labeled as taking M6 screws, but the package included M5s. $2 hardware store trip.
A:AnswerI know this is 3 years late, LOL... we have our cable hooked up via other inputs (HDMI), however, our oldschool NES (original Nintendo Entertainment System) uses a coaxial cable and it works just fine on this TV.
A:AnswerTry a "y" (2) stereo adapter of the to split the audio out of the pc. Need a 1/8" stereo plug with rca plugs, split the the output with the "y" adapters to the stereo and the another device.
A:AnswerThat depends on how you are connecting to the TV.
If you use an HDMI cord you can connect to any TV and use it as a monitor. Using an HDMI cord you can extend the display, duplicate the display, or only use the TV as the display.
If you are connecting through a VGA cable it will not not work.
A:AnswerThey are the mounting holes provided the the tv mfg. to mount the wall mount. Vesa is the standard measurement which most mfg. of mount brackets ahere to.