From there, I traced where the handlebar turn signal wires went into the wiring harness and followed the harness from the handlebar cowl to the front cowl. Once there, you will find a connector (the one on my like was white) with 9 wires, if I remember right. Find the orange and light blue wires where they come into the connector; confirm they are the right ones by activating the turn signals and checking with a circuit tester. Note these wires, as we will splice into them for our power source. Next, open up the cowl down to the integrated lights. On the back of where the integrated signals should be, there is a dummy plug that has a small wire harness screwed to the back. Twist and remove this dummy plug and pull out of the cowl. Remove the screw and toss the wire hanger that held the wire. These wires are the power and ground for the running lights directly below the integrated turn signals. We'll use the grounds from them (again green) for our signal grounds as well.
Next we will move on to creating a custom socket for these integrated signals using the socket/reflector on the handlebar signals and the dummy plug. Using a hacksaw, or similar small-toothed blade, cut the dummy plugs right behind the flange, so you have what looks like a washer and the mounting tabs with none of the "bucket" part remaining. The back of the flange will be the surface you join to the socket, so make sure it is flat, and even rough it up with a file or the like to make a better adhesion. Next, cut the reflectors just above the contacts, (take the bulb out first!) so you have the socket and part of the reflector after cut makes a nice flat surface as well. Again, this will be a mating surface, so make sure it's flat, but rough texture is good. Now glue these two pieces together with a high quality glue that will be able to withstand twisting of install/uninstallation and the bouncing up and down of driving and put them in a clamp or vise to hold them tight until the glue is fully set. Now we have to wire our new sockets into the existing wiring.