Its gonna depend on the machine, but the one at my gym is designed for folks with orangutan-length arms, so I avoid it like the plague.
If you've got rotator problems all you can really do is rest it and try to alleviate the inflammation with ice and anti-inflammatorys. If its recent, you can get physio and/or cortico-steroids that will speed the recovery. If you must train, follow the old adage; "doctor, doctor, it hurts when I do this. Well dont do that." Find exercises that dont hurt at all. I had rotator problems for years. When I first started competing I weighed around 170 lbs and would bench sets of six at 275 but my max in competition was 295-305! My rotator would hurt halfway up and I'd stop lifting. That went on for years. Around 1992 or so the IPF allowed bench shirts and I trained for 6 months with the shirt and low reps. My shoulder healed up and I've never looked back.
If you've got rotator problems all you can really do is rest it and try to alleviate the inflammation with ice and anti-inflammatorys. If its recent, you can get physio and/or cortico-steroids that will speed the recovery. If you must train, follow the old adage; "doctor, doctor, it hurts when I do this. Well dont do that." Find exercises that dont hurt at all. I had rotator problems for years. When I first started competing I weighed around 170 lbs and would bench sets of six at 275 but my max in competition was 295-305! My rotator would hurt halfway up and I'd stop lifting. That went on for years. Around 1992 or so the IPF allowed bench shirts and I trained for 6 months with the shirt and low reps. My shoulder healed up and I've never looked back.
Comment