DON'T FIGHT IT!! :lecturef_smilie:
Spyders have 2 wheels up front, so there's always going to be
waaayyy more steering feedback than on a motorcycle with only one wheel up front, or an auto that's 3 times heavier on much the same sized front tire footprint! Just relax your grip on the handlebars, drop your elbows & shoulders down & back, and
gently GUIDE your Spyder down the road! Look waaay out ahead and plan where you want to go, then gently follow that path without fighting or 'micro-managing' the close in steering in response to the little bumps & wobbles - just gently guide your Spyder along that path & ignore the minor steering feedback caused by having two sets of tire footprints up front!

hyea:
Even then it'll probably take some miles to get used to it, they are very different to a 2 wheeled motorcycle in thisrespect (& others!) so if you have extensive motorcycle experience, it
might take some hundreds of miles (or even maybe a thousand or so!) of saddle time to overcome the ingrained responses & your 'feel' expectations, but once you do,
WOOHEEE, then you'll
really start to enjoy the Miles of Smiles most of us rave about! If you don't have that extensive experience on a 2 wheeler, you've just gotta put in the saddle time to learn the limits & feel there too! So get some more gentle & relaxed miles under your belt & come back to tell us how your going & if it's become any better yet.
That said, while the latest versions haven't had quite the same degree of concern, earlier Spyders especially were renowned for leaving the factory
AND dealers with
APPALLING wheel alignment; and the OE spec Kenda tires rate pretty much lower than a piss on a dusty road, so if relaxing your grip & gently guiding rather than fighting it doesn't improve things for you, consider getting a proper wheel alignment from someone who knows what they are doing (like Squared Away, altho they are having an 'alignment break' atm while touring & running intro/demo rides for BRP) - generally, & sadly, getting a
good laser alignment will mean going somewhere
OTHER than your dealer! :sour: And once you've got a good alignment done, you can fit new 'real' auto tires, up front especially, and maybe even upgrade the swaybar & endlinks with BajaRon's significantly improved version - 'real' tires (run at about 16-18 psi as appropriate for the lighter loading) plus a good swaybar with solid endlinks insread of the OE 'floppy Cheese-stick' bar with flexible & dodgy OE placcy links will significantly improve your ride & handling even further beyond the improvements gained thru getting the wheels aligned properly & learning to relax & gently guide your Spyder rather than trying to muscle it along! :thumbup:
Good Luck! :cheers: