Hi, and welcome to the forum!!
First off, I'm glad nobody got hurt in the chlorinator incident--I'm assuming you're talking about an inline chlorinator, as opposed to a floater? You are right in not using anymore trichlor tabs due to your stabilizer being so high--but keep in mind that the cal-hypo tabs are not to be used in an inline feeder. There's something about the amount of heat and the speed at which they dissipate that makes that a dangerous proposition, so if you're going to use the cal hypo tabs, use a floater. One of the chem levels that you didn't post was your calcium hardness level--when you calcium levels get too high, then using the cal hypo will cause milky water. So....your best bet is to switch to plain, unscented bleach, or liquid chlorine if it's available in your area. Liquid chlorine is the same as bleach, but at a 12% concentration, where ultra bleach is a 6% concentration. In a pool your size, each gallon of 6% bleach that you add will increase your chlorine by just over 2 ppm, so you can use that as a guide. I want to caution you, though, that with a CYA of 100, you need to be keeping your chlorine levels absolutely no lower than 8 ppm, or you're inviting an algae bloom. It would be better to try to keep it closer to 10, so that you have a little wiggle room and don't ever go below the 8 ppm. You can use the link to the "best guess" table to see what levels of chlorine are adequate for what levels of CYA.
Janet
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