You mean the Next Generation Romulan large capital ship? Or the Klingon adaptation from the Krik movies?
If you like the former, then you'll probably love the Human-Mimbari (and latter
Interstellar Alliance) Ranger
White Star frigate sized cap ship. Especially if you ever watch
Babylon 5 which was the first major Sci Fi show to use use CGI exclusively, and the motions and rendering was never seen before in the genre.
As an engineer,
Babylon 5's first-ever use of total CGI was really cool to me, because it was the first Sci Fi series to use real, actual principles of Newtonian physics, without artificial gravity (at least for Humans, among others), which were pretty much left to rare Sci Fi movies (like
2001 and
2010 at the time).
You have to watch
Babylon 5 to understand what I mean when I talk about the Earth Alliance
Star Fury fighter. The pilot is "standing up," which is actually ideal for many things, as legs are great shock absorbers and there is no gravity going on. The Star Fury had limited attitude control, but to reverse thrust more than a little, it had to turn around. That meant, for the first (and finally damn time) a space craft actually acted like a real space craft, the attitude vector did
not match the velocity vector, unlike every other Sci Fi show that "flew like airplanes" in space.
Wanna blow holes all along the side of a capital ship? Thrust vector parallel and alongside of it, then turn 90 degrees and start shooting. You are facing directly at the side of the ship, but you're traveling parallel to it -- shooting all down its side as you travel. What a concept, real, Newtonian physics for once!
Probably the coolest thing about Star Furies is when they launch from the rotating Babylon 5 station. The station is rotating, and at a good rate for 0.8Gs or whatever it is. So the pilot "walks" into the Fury, which is parallel to the rotation, so gravity seems normal. Then the launch arm rotates it 90 degrees outward, so it's now completely perpendicular to rotation. What does that mean? To launch the Fury fighter, all the station has to do is release the docking clamp. Centrifugal force "throws" the fighter out, perpendicular to the station.
Likewise, the main Earth Alliance capital ship,
Omega Class Destroyers, had a central, rotating section for artificial gravity. In the pre-equal movie
In the Beginning, you can see bridge personnel "sitting on the ceiling" to maximize cabin usage. Why? Because there is no gravity. You'll also see personnel "strapped in," again, for the same reasons.
Also, there is no "launch" of the fighters from the Omega, because the bay is already in 0G. That's why you see the Furies "convoy out" in close proximity when leave the way, because there is no "launch," just Furies moving out on their own power. Again, this may not seem interesting or facinating to most people, but to an engineer, it's everything -- or at least it was in 1994 when every Sci Fi show used and assumed artificial gravity.
Image renderings from:
http://www.starshipmodeler.com/b5/b5tech.htm
There are also more Babylon 5 models from Ship Schematics:
http://www.shipschematics.net/b5/