>>308958For the price, it's a good receiver.
I used a GPS12 for years. Main reason I upgraded is because I filled teh 1024-point track log in half a day's ride.
There's a lot of options available with modern GPS receivers. Find out what's out there, make a list of what you need vs. want, set a budget, and go from there. As a basic GPS, the older stuff works just fine. The signals are still the same...
For $30, you're going to have a tough time finding a nice color GPS with mapping capability.