I've tried several times over the years to find out where the Communications and Science stations are on the Klingon Battlecruiser Amar? There's a diagram in a Star Trek magazine which show the Captain's chair, Helm & Navigation and 2 weapons stations, I think the blueprints show the same thing but my set isn't handy right now!
Shouldn't there be an Engineering station to!
Are the 3 bridge stations not seen located on another part of the bridge not seen on screen?
James
Well, first off, there's no reason for an "engineering station" on a bridge, except for filmmaking purposes. No more than there would need to be a "chief medical officer" station on the bridge.
That said... the Amar had two "wings" off the main central bridge area, which could have had any variety of substations.
What we KNOW:
1) Captain, forward.
2) Behind the captain... helm/nav
3) Behind helm/nav... the executive officer (on a circular platform)
4) Behind the XO... two "weapon turret" stations.
Also... beside the captain, on either side, is a glass panel with displays. And behind each of those is a whole 'nother room, with multiple workstations.
I'd suggest that you might have an "engineering-ish" workstation over there, but that the main engineer wouldn't be on the bridge. I'd suggest that there's an "internal security" station on the bridge, and a "communications" and an "external intelligence" (somewhat similar to what we think of on the Enterprise as "science") station, and almost certainly a "damage control" station. The security, intelligence, and communications ought to be in one "wing" and the engineering status and damage control status stations would be in the other "wing."
The guy on the bridge at the "engineering" station would be a flunky. The head engineer would be off "motivating" his work crews.
I don't imagine a Klingon captain really caring about much that any of those stations were up to... but any information which he'd need to see would be on those glass panel displays on either side of his chair.
In front of him, there are two displays... a "tactical display" at his feet, and a main viewer, above that.
I believe that's what the original intent of the Amar bridge was. I can't really support that with annotated notes from the designer, though, so you can disregard it if you wish.