Exactly Gamer Muscle.
You can get good results with and without laser scanning.
All laser scanning does is make sure that artists don't make things up, they work off exact data, so there is no scope for them to make bad decisions or choices off incomplete data sets.
If you need a good track surface and you are paying people by the day, then laser scanning is the quickest and cheapest way to get it right, AND you also get the bonus of capturing a lot of the landscape around the track thrown in for free. Great... just what we need.
There are other routes but all considered they just cost more in the long run, despite being cheaper on kit to get the data, more man hours are spent getting it feeling and looking right.
Hampus Andersson, those images are interesting.
Note how all the AC images are low angles so you can't see all the areas the scanner isn't hitting behind objects. How the iRacing images are high up and leave no area un-scanned.
No they don't go out of the bounds of the track, but by definition of the scanning they cover any given point on the course from at least TWO points (that is how they overlap with static scanning)... thus any given object is likely to be nicely covered with points from both sides... useful when building from the data.
That tower has a curved profile from how it looks, so as the planar profile has travelled along it's scanned along it's curved face and given some points.
Had the building been square to the track and square sided, you'd not get any data for anything except the face facing the track.
You can see an example of that missing data on the pit tyre wall where the data off the bits facing us are partially missing.
However, in the same image (top one) the armco to the left seems to have data behind it. I wonder if they also take pano-scans at certain locations and combine the data... it certainly looks like it from the images.
And if that is the case, then it makes you wonder how the time scales are impacted.
I'd happily work from either data set, but personally I'd prefer to work off the fuller coverage that iRacing type scanning offers.
The AC type scanning is still perfectly fine, but I know I'd still have to refer back to photos/videos more often to just make checks on certain details than I would if I worked off static tower scans!
Just an observation that is interesting that is all.
But as Gamer Muscle said, in the end it's about the love and attention that the authors put in, not the 'data collection' method used.
AC tracks are probably just as good as iRacing ones... just the artists might spend a bit longer using reference materials but save £££ on scanning
Dave