Having the FC too low for your CYA is what is most likely causing the cloudiness. It is the beginnings of an algae bloom. Every time you add trichlor you are adding more CYA. The more CYA you add the higher FC you have to maintain.
Trichlor will not raise your FC any faster than bleach. As a matter of fact the liquid would technically be faster because there is no time to dissolve.
What test kit do you have? As jblizzle posted above, you are going to need to go through the SLAM process and you will need an FAS-DPD chlorine test to do that.
If your CYA is really that high you are going to need to replace some water and stop adding CYA (including products that contain CYA like trichlor and dichlor powders and tablets) and stick to the liquid chlorine (bleach) for now.
*edit*
I read through a couple of your previous posts and saw you mentioned you have a Taylor kit. Which kit is it? It looks like in your other thread about metal stains you posted your CYA as 75. That was already too high and now you're reporting 100.
The test only goes up to 100 so you may actually be higher than that.
This is the cause of your cloudiness. You are continuing to use products that are raising your CYA level and you haven't adjusted your chlorine to match. It's passing the maintainable levels.
Re-Read the ABC's of Pool Water Chemistry
http://www.troublefreepool.com/content/123-abc-of-pool-water-chemistry if you've already read it and also look at the chlorine/cya chart
http://www.troublefreepool.com/content/128-chlorine-cya-chart-slam-shock.
It's important that you understand the relationship between CYA and Chlorine and know what you're adding to your pool and what levels you need to maintain.