Good morning.
The turbo shock is chlorine mixed with calcium so it does not raise your cya, but instead it will raise your calcium. For every 10 ppm of FC, you'll get 7 ppm of calcium.
You have a vinyl pool, so LOW calcium doesn't matter like it does on other surfaces, but high calcium can cause scaling on any type of surface. Youre also on well water, so you might have naturally high calcium with hard water.
If you test your calcium with your TFP kit and know its low enough, there's no real harm in using cal hypo so long as you're calculating/keeping track of what you add and stay within TFP guidelines. (this particular product des not seem to contain copper -- if it did, you wouldn't want to use it...the problem with these "do it all" products is knowing whether there's cya or copper in it...have to read labels carefully.)
So that one is your call -- if your water is already calcium-saturated, and you use the cal-hypo, you would see a bit of clouding...but this filters out, and sometimes takes some oxidized iron with it (if you happen to have oxidized iron in your water.)
Generally, floc is not recommended at TFP (I still have two bottles sitting around unused from my conversion. One of them I literally found intact at the bottom of the swamp when it cleared
Part of the reason is that it is generally unnecessary when chlorine does the job and the KISS rule applies here

Another reason its not generally recommended is because to use it, you turn off the filter overnight to let everything settle, then vacuum to waste in am. Most people in swampy conditions at slam level shouldn't turn off the filter...and many can't effectively vacuum to waste.
With that said, my about-to-be-fired pool tech HAD tried to floc the swamp before I found TFP. Precisely nothing happened (except he broke the skimmer plate trying to vacuum blind). What I can't say for sure as weather the flock later had any supportive action on consolidating the particles for filtering. Floc is based on sound water plant principals for clumping together particulate matter.
So in your shoes, I'd likely try to take the clarifier and floc back, or hang onto the floc for a later experiment in clearing the final bits if you're feeling adventurous -- but I suspect it would be useless in current conditions and might distract from the plan at hand

The floc product isn't the problem itself...its the more haphazard "shock and floc" mindset of pool techs that kind of disempowers the pool consumer and helps keep em in the dark....is a crutch that contraindicates knowing precisely how to manage your pool effectively (and economically...again, the KISS principal, and really understanding all unforeseen consequences of what goes into your water.)
TFP tries to stick to known, reliable-100% strategies that keep the pool owner informed and in control. That's what ultimately makes pools trouble free
But that doesn't mean you necessarily have to eschew all commercial products (though you generally just won't need them
For me, that might mean I go to a pool store and buy a product I like because its more convenient to me, even though its more expensive -- eg I buy 12% chlorine at the pool store because they refill my empties and I hate consuming/wasting plastic...that's a personal enviro trade-off

Or borates...there's a commercial boric acid product I like for making my water feel soft and i often buy it this way because its easier than hauling boxes of team mule borax and muriatic acid to create the same effect).
I'm no less "TFP" for that preference, provided I know exactly what's in the commercial product, how it will behave in my water, and how it will impact or not impact other parameters.