No Delay in Communication Between Astronauts and Mission Control

Communicating Faster Than the Speed of Light
If you watch the Apollo videos NASA doesn't even put an appropriate delay between the astronauts in the LEM and mission control to account for the moon's distance. The astronauts and Huston are communicating faster than the speed of light.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6Tku-CgNnI

"The Moon is 350-400,000km away from Earth, that is 1.25-1.4 Light Seconds.     Yet the Communications Between Earth & The "Moon" have no Perceivable Delay.      If they were really on the Moon there would have been a delay of 2.5-2.8      seconds between Ground Control and the Astronauts on the Surface of the Moon."

Apparently NASA astronauts are trained in the art of talking over other people. They know exactly what ground control is going to say, as they rehearsed so many times!!

Additional Delay by Land Lines
The speed of light calculations do not even account for the fact that Apollo 11 signals were allegedly received at a dish in Australia, which was then relayed to Huston on land lines (significantly slower than speed of light as anyone who has made an international phone call across an ocean can attest), causing even greater delay.

Allegations of Clip Editing
"LunarTurne" says that the sound clips were edited to remove the delay:

You have simply found edited video/audio. Apollo video and audio has been copies perhaps more than any﻿ events in history. It is very often edited for time, so the edited versions don't reflect the delays correctly. However, the delays WERE heard in the original broadcasts (as I and millions others can attest). You can find more dependable, unedited audio. Go to the "Lunar Surface Journal" website. What you've     discovered is hardly 100% proof of anything. -- LunarTuner

But if you go to the Lunar Surface Journal website we see the same no-delay videos: http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/video11.html#Lan

See the 15 minute video for instance. It's the third video clip down on the page. In many cases the astronauts and mission control are saying "Roger that," "Copy," and responding to eachother's questions almost immediately.

The snippit from the original video "Huston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed." "Roger that Tranquility, we copy you on the ground. You have a bunch of guys here about to turn blue. We're breathing again, thanks a lot." occurs at the 15:18 mark and is without delay.

Recorded at Mission Control
Forum poster Markjo suggests that it is explained by the recordings being made at mission control.

He quotes the following from a hoax debunking page:

Claims that the delays were only half a second are untrue, as examination of the original recordings show. It should also be borne in mind that there should not be a straightforward, consistent time delay between every response, as the conversation is being recorded at one end - Mission Control. Responses from Mission Control could be heard without any delay, as the recording is being made at the same time that Houston receives the transmission from the Moon.

But if we watch the video linked in the second post from the Lunar Surface Journal you would see that the astronauts are clearly communicating with mission control without delay, and that mission control is communicating with the astronauts without delay. It cuts both ways. Each are saying "Roger," "Copy That," and answering each other's questions almost immediately.

Apparently you didn't even watch the first video I provided. The first "The Eagle has landed" example in the Youtube video in the first post shows mission control responding immediately to the astronauts. The second "What does the moon look like?" example in the original Youtube video shows the astronauts responding to mission control without a 2.8 second delay.

The claim that this is explained by the feed is being recorded at mission control is bogus. This is what should have happened:

Mission Control: "What does the moon look like? Over." [1.4 second delay should happen here] [Apollo astronauts receive transmission] Astronauts: "Okay, Houston. The moon is essentially gray,     no color; looks like plaster-of-paris or sort of a grayish      beach sand." [1.4 second delay should happen here] [Mission Control receives transmission] Mission control: OK

The recording at mission control should have picked up 2.8 seconds of silence before hearing the response. But there is not.