I'm definitely interested in seeing this too. I had a dealership quote me $1400-$1500 to replace. That was including "9 hours of labor". They made it sound like it was brain surgery, I don't think the guy had a clue. That's typical I guess. I had a friend change out his bars on a 2013 Street Glide only thing that needed extending was the internal wires. His is not a CVO though, I'm not sure if that would matter.
Oddly enough I would believe that dealer shop quote, at least for my '08 serk. Willing to bet dealer would replace EVERYTHING, with only wire extensions added. So one would have the bars of one's own flavor, as well as riser's to match the one inch handlebar mount center that aftermarket bars have (HD has 1 1/4"), new extended hydraulic clutch line and front brake line, which must go all the way back to the ABS control unit, not just to the fork tee. Probably have to pull the tank to get that brake line back there. A new TBW unit, as the original stock throttle had a connector that makes it tough to thread back through the handlebars. Oh yeah, threading all that wire is no fun either. Open up the nacelle, change out the connectors for bar wires and correctly add extensions and reset to connectors. Bunch it all up, bleed all the brakes, bleed the hydraulic clutch line, and clean all up.
So by that time you are into $600 in parts (dealer dollars), and yes, close to 9 hours shop time.
That's why I'll do this on my own. Not rocket science, just takes time. I really don't believe I'm just going to be able to slap bars on, like changing out a mirror. But.... we'll see. Stay tuned.