waterbear gave you good advice last year in this post. Did you follow that advice keeping the TA low (say, at 70 ppm) and having a higher pH target not below 7.6 and seeing if the pH rise to 7.8 is slow enough to be tolerable? Did you ever add the 50 ppm Borates?
I disagree with Carl on this one in terms of the recommended TA level. If the source of pH rise is due to carbon dioxide outgassing, then raising the TA level is only going to make things worse to accelerate the rate of pH rise and especially the amount of acid that needs to be added.
Do you have sources of aeration such as waterfalls, spillovers, fountains or returns pointed upward? I agree with Carl that turning off such features (if possible) and pointing returns so that they do not cause waves or breaks in the water surface should help. Did you get your plaster resurfaced? If so, then the curing of such plaster will have the pH rise (and the CH as well) and there's nothing you can do about that but add acid, but this effect will slow down a lot after the first month and should become very slow after a year.
In spas when using the Dichlor-then-bleach method, people sometimes need to get the TA down to 50 or even 40 ppm before their pH becomes stable due to the great amount of aeration in spas. They usually use 50 ppm Borates as an additional pH buffer and if you need to keep your TA low, even below 70 ppm, then you could do the same. Also, for your plaster pool, once you settle on a TA and pH level for pH stability you can then adjust your Calcium Hardness (CH) if needed to get to saturation index that is closer to zero (The Pool Calculator will calculate this for you).
Richard
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