Balancing is the procedure by which the mass distribution of a rotor is checked and, if necessary, adjusted in order to ensure that the vibration of the journals and/or forces on the bearings at a frequency corresponding to service speed are within specified limits.
In practical terms, balancing corrects unbalance. There are two types of unbalance, single and two plane. Single plane unbalance can be pictured by imagining a disc shaped part, such as a bicycle wheel, with a weight taped to the rim. When the bike is lifted off the ground, the wheel rotates and comes to rest with the weight at the bottom. If you were to spin the wheel, the bike would shake as the wheel tried to rotate about the center of the wheel’s mass, which is no longer located at its axle. The center of mass is displaced from the geometric centerline. Another way to illustrate this effect is to place a lump of modeling clay inside a Frisbees rim and throw it. Instead of flying normally, the disc will wobble as it spins around the shifted center of mass.
Unbalance of this type is sometimes called force or static unbalance. It can be corrected by removing the weight or by adding an equal weight directly opposite (180 degrees from the unbalancing weight. Either measure would move the center of mass back to the centerline of the part.

Two-plane unbalance can be pictured by imagining a cylindrical or drum-shaped part, such as an automobile wheel’s rim, with one weight attached at one end of the cylinder and another attached at the other end, but offset 180 degrees from the first weight. Note that the ends of the cylinder are in different planes. If the rim were raised off the ground, it would not rotate as the bicycle wheel did. Spinning the automobile wheel, however, would cause it to wobble as it sought to rotate about the axis of this mass, which is no longer parallel to the geometric axis. Two-plane unbalance is sometimes called couple unbalance. It can be corrected only by adding two correction weights at an axial distance from each other (see figure 1).
When both single and two-plane unbalance are present in a rotor, the condition is called dynamic unbalance. To correct this type of unbalance, one must compensate for both eccentricity (caused by static unbalance) and wobble (caused by couple unbalance). In practice, any dynamic unbalance can be corrected by making adjustments in two axially separated planes. However, as the planes get close together, couple correction weights become very large.