Retro guy says the C64 can't do it. The lion kingdom says with enough time & the right software, it could. It would have to use sin/cos transforms instead of a fast fourier transform. It would take a few disk swaps. The moon bounce aspect is just a facade for the real ham radio application. The audio file is 620000 samples, 13 bits per sample.
https://www.arrl.org/files/file/18JT65.pdf
The lion kingdom's vague understanding is JT65 sends a sine wave on 1 of 65 frequencies to encode 65 possible symbols. Each symbol is 1/3 of a second. 1 symbol is a sync code. Every other symbol is a sync code. The mane problem is detecting the pseudo random sync vector. They call for a 2048 sample FFT.
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