There are - in general - two things that cause weather helm:
1) the center of EFFORT of the rig (the combination of sails) is aft of the center of LATERAL RESISTANCE of the underbody (keel/centerboard and rudder). This can be addressed in a number of ways - reducing the area of the mainsail (eg, reefing), reducing the *power* of the mainsail (by flattening the sail, letting the leech twist off, other trim options), or by shifting the center of EFFORT forward (generally by adjusting the headstay and backstay to move the mast forward). All of these are worth trying
2) when a boat heels, the underwater surface changes from a symmetrical shape to an asymmetrical shape - the leeward side of the hull is immersed, and the windward side of the hull is raised, resulting in a "volume" of displacement that is lopsided. Even if the sails are trimmed perfectly, allowing a boat to heel to leeward will tend to make it turn to weather. Any boat. So... adding weight "aft" will not help with your weather helm, but adding weight to *weather* (flattening the boat so that it is sailing more on its designed lines) will absolutely help weather helm.
It is possible that a trim issue is causing the bow-down trim, and correcting (getting the knuckle of the boat up out of the water) will help lessen the weather helm. But the root cause of the weather helm is (almost) always going to be related to either trim/rake or heel.
$.02