Well, the whole thing was broadcast "live and uninterrupted" on the VOA Shortwave Service, so they could have been listening to that.
But that would probably have included the Quindar tones, and we didn't hear them. Also, the relative timings of the Capcom and Apollo astronauts would match the recordings made at Houston and available on the AFJ and ALSJ. They don't.
The Quindar tones were used to mute and unmute the uplink transmitter. Because a long series of analog phone lines connected Houston to the uplink station, background noise on those lines would ordinarily be continuously transmitted to the astronauts. The Quindar tones, generated at Houston, activated and deactivated a muting relay at the uplink transmitter so that any phone line noise would be transmitted only when a Capcom was actually talking.
The Quindar tones were removed at the uplink station with a pair of narrow audio notch filters (note the key and unkey tones have slightly different pitches). So the beeps that made NASA so distinctive were, ironically, not heard by the astronauts.
The fact that we didn't hear the Quindar tones in the Jodrell Bank recordings strongly suggests we were hearing the actual uplink transmission. The short pause between one of McCandless's comments and Apollo's reply pretty much confirms we were hearing the uplink via the moon. It certainly should have worked; the uplink was a very powerful signal, and enough would have reflected off the moon to be audible at such a large dish.
Right. I see what you mean
So you think that;
1. Capcom transmits on the uplink; the signal bounces off the moon and is received by Jodrell bank
2. Apollo replies are received directly from the CSM S-Band transmittier
The alternative is that Jodrell Bank had direct access to the uplink signal after the quindar tones were removed. There was no tracking station in England; the nearest uplink was at the DSN Complex near Madrid in Spain so perhaps they had a link into that.
It should be relatively easy to work out what they were listening to by comparing the timing of the communications. If what they are hearing is the reflected signal, then the Capcom broadcasts in the Jodrell Bank video will be considerably later than they would be if they were listening to the uplink signal from the DSN
1. Listening to the reflected signal would give a short delay between Capcom transmissions and replies from Apollo 11
2. Listening to the DSN uplink would mean a long delay (an extra 4 seconds?) between Capcom and Apollo 11 replies
The only hitch I can see is that (I thought) the uplink and downlink were on different frequencies in the S-Band. Two receivers attached to the same antenna?
ETA: Early in the audio, I have transcribed this
0:18 - CAPCOM "That would depend in your point of view" (0:20)
0:26 - APOLLO "Roger that (0:27)
So that is six seconds between the end of CAPCOM's transmission and the beginning of APOLLO'S reply. This transmission takes place at around 20:29UT on July 19 (according to Bernard Lowell's narration) so if that part of the transmissions could be found in the Apollo records it would be interesting to compare them.