Geometric monitoring of slender support structures, particularly steel lattice transmission towers, is a critical component of power infrastructure diagnostics. Such structures are susceptible to environmental influences and long-term deformation processes, which necessitates precise assessment of their geometric axis. The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of the terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) scanner class and point cloud registration strategy on the determination of the geometric axis of a steel high-voltage lattice transmission tower (hereafter LTT). Unlike previous studies focused primarily on TLS-based axis reconstruction, this work introduces a comparative assessment of registration strategies, an error propagation model, and the proposed Axis Drift Index (ADI) as quantitative indicators of axis stability. The analysis was based on data obtained using a tachymetric method (reference), a compact scanner (Leica BLK360), and a survey-grade scanner (Riegl VZ-400i). The comparison included planimetric axis deviation, consistency of deformation direction, variation in results with height, and the influence of registration quality. The results show that TLS measurements performed using a survey-grade scanner and target-based registration exhibit high agreement with tachymetric results. In contrast, cloud-to-cloud registration without a stable reference framework leads to cumulative errors and instability of the reconstructed axis, particularly in the upper parts of the structure. The observed deviations in the BLK360 dataset were dominated by registration-related geometric instability rather than unequivocal structural deformation signals. The findings indicate that the accuracy of geometric axis determination in slender structures is governed more by the adopted point cloud registration strategy than by the scanner class itself. The proposed ADI parameter and linear error propagation model additionally enabled a quantitative assessment of geometric consistency with height. From an engineering perspective, this highlights the importance of stable reference systems and appropriate survey design in high-precision TLS applications. Although the study was conducted on a single lattice tower, the results provide practical insight into the reliability of TLS workflows for slender structures characterized by discontinuous geometry and high sensitivity to registration errors.
Robert Gradka (Sat,) studied this question.