Yep -- the receivers with smaller displays are somewhat limited in the number of fields they show at one time, but often the other data is accessible using the arrow keys to tab through.

As a for instance, on the Geko 301 there is a page with a compass displayed and on the bottom of the display is a field for info selectable by the user. By using the arrow key you can tab through: Heading (you need to choose between True or Mag), Location (Lat/Long or UTM), Elevation, Speed, Time/Date, et al.

Similarly, on the Elevation page (next) the lower field has: Glide ratio, Min Elevation, Max Elevation,a 12 hr pressure graphic, Ambient Pressure, Normalized Pressure, Vertical Speed, et al.

The next page is a table of four fields and you can select which info is displayed in each. Mine currently shows (top to bottom) Elevation, Heading, Lat/Long and Time of Day.

Bottom line, there is a lot of info available on these receivers if you know how (on which page) to access it. Once you get a GPS, play with it a lot and do everything with it on a known course before you go wandering into the unknown.
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Okay, what’s your point??