As far as I know (could be wrong) chrome can be chemically stripped, but the nickel andcopper stays behind and is buffed off. If it all comes off with the chemical you should be safe.
The low bars, also look at Superbike bars, maybe r90S bars, and early hondatwins used then too.
I posted the same question in the Swedish classichonda.se forum and got this answer, which is quoted from a MC-magazine. I Used Google translate so dont kill me for the translation.
"If I got it right dechroming is a reverse chrome plating in an acid bath. Chromium and nickel migrates from the part you want to dechrome to an electrode. Unfortunately, you can not "re-use" material. In real chromium baths are chromium dissolved as salts.
Left after dechroming just gets copper layer,
that is, if the object has been copper-plated, otherwise it becomes just a
dull steel surface. Will also removed the copper occurs in another bath which is said to be highly toxic.
Trying to grind the chrome is döfott (means if you were born to do this then you are born to do this until you die), I've tried. Nickel is considerably harder than steel so the underlying statutory surface gets damaged when you grind through."
So i dont know, either whey they should have the chemicals to remove the copper also.
Think im going to give the company that does chroming a mail/call the get the real info
about the handlebars. I´ve checked the superbike bars, they are the same but with lower pull back. and im afraid the MC would interfere with the tachometer. Any ways I dont have the money right now to test more then ONE bar
.
But yes, sometimes when i look at the pictures of the eurobars they look abit to close to the driver..
BUT then here on the forum the meassurements for the 5300-300-610 euro bars pullback would be 3,81". Many superbike bars has like 5 1/2 or at least above 5". Which is more then the original eurobars...
Found this "It sounds like these are aluminum alloy rims and the aluminum is corroding underneath the plating. Stripping the old finish requires multiple steps because there are multiple layers. The chrome is stripped with hydrochloric acid, and the underlying nickel is stripped with nitric acid. There may be copper underneath that, which probably must be stripped with a proprietary ammonia-based stripper."
on this site
http://www.finishing.com/267/91.shtmlSo, several of baths and a "chrome shop" would be able to do that.... question is, the cost