Upgrade my tone arm?


I proudly own a super nice Woodsong Garrard 301 with an Ortophon RS 309D arm and a Myajima Shalabi cartridge. My phono stage is it he one in my Atma-Sphere MP-3 preamp. Upgrade fever has taken hold and I am thinking of getting a Triplaner tonearm. I do have dual arm boards on my Woodsong. I understand that the Triplaner would be a significant upgrade. However, since I am fairly new to analog, it has been a steep learning curve. Such a big investment is in question since I don’t completely understand how much of an improvement a significantly better arm would be. Any advise would be appreciated.
mglik
Dear @mglik : @mulveling  is rigth. Now, what do you not like abot the quality performance of your cartridge paIRED WITH THAT VERY GOOD TONEARM?

Been a removable headshell design you can change the tonearm/cartridge  " signature " changing and testing different headshells of different headshell build materials and weigth even its shape and you can upgrade too the headshell wires for a better ones and this makes a difference for the better always.

Other up-grade you can do is to rewire the ortofon internal wiring for this one:

     https://www.zavfino1877.com/4litz3ag-pure-silver-tonearm-re-wire-kit

and you know wnever hat: TriplaNAR CAN'T TOUCH THAT UP-GRADED oRTOFON, YOU WILL HAVE A 10k TONEARM.

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
I've been using a Tri-Planar with Lyra Kleos for a couple of years now and could not be happier.  You might find that upgrading both the tonearm and cartridge to be well suited to each other is a better way to go, but you'll never know until you've heard these combos for yourself.
For a low compliance cart you need a heavy tonearm like Ikeda, you can also look for 12” inch Reed 3P with the heaviest armwand (18g). 
+ for chakster

Also if you can get real upgrade from Dynavector DV507, it's more versatile arm than Ikeda.
bukanona, to be polite the DV507 is a nightmare. 
mglik, it is always best to start out with a lighter arm. You can always add mass, hard to take it away.
chakster, I love Reed arms. The 2G is a better design than the 3P. Both use the same tonearm wands of varying masses. The 2g is a neutral balance arm while the 3P is not. The 2G's vertical bearings are two points in the plane of the record (and stylus) with the counterbalance also in the same plane, just like the Kuzma 4 Point. Once you have the tonearm in neutral balance it will stay in whatever vertical position you put it in while the 3P will swing up and down around the balance point like a scale. This is called static balance. For a tonearm neutral balance is always better. The Schroder CB and Triplanar are also examples of neutral balance arms. Interestingly, the Schroder LT is a static balance arm. I think Frank was stuck with this because of the arm's geometry and the swinging bearing platform did not give him room to lower the vertical bearing to the plane of the record. Still an incredible arm.