Have you tried turning off the anti-skate to see if that is the problem?
Have you used a bubble level on the flat part of the tonearm headshell?
The ART9 is sensitive to VTA.
Level the platter with the bubble level and then check the level of the headshell when the cartridge is in the groove of an LP, obviously tracking force adjusted to account for the weight of the level.
Once you level the headshell relative to the platter, you are at "0" and a great place to evaluate the cartridge's performance.
Didn't you get a protractor with the turntable? Use that one for now and check the alignment.
If you have to adjust alignment then re-adjust VTF. VTF for the ART9 (for me) was 1.85G.
Sounds like something fundamentally off in the alignment. Your tonearm is optimized for the ART9 and it is capable of sounding as smooth and clean as anything.
The '9 does tend to sound warmer and bassier on belt drives and tables with acrylic platters (which are not good IMHO) . However you have work to do before you get there.
Have you used a bubble level on the flat part of the tonearm headshell?
The ART9 is sensitive to VTA.
Level the platter with the bubble level and then check the level of the headshell when the cartridge is in the groove of an LP, obviously tracking force adjusted to account for the weight of the level.
Once you level the headshell relative to the platter, you are at "0" and a great place to evaluate the cartridge's performance.
Didn't you get a protractor with the turntable? Use that one for now and check the alignment.
If you have to adjust alignment then re-adjust VTF. VTF for the ART9 (for me) was 1.85G.
Sounds like something fundamentally off in the alignment. Your tonearm is optimized for the ART9 and it is capable of sounding as smooth and clean as anything.
The '9 does tend to sound warmer and bassier on belt drives and tables with acrylic platters (which are not good IMHO) . However you have work to do before you get there.