lborne said:
I put in 512 ounces which is 4 gallons. Why did you use 80? I used 512 because the pool guy said to put in 4 to 6 bottles of acid.
Because I made a mistake and multiplied 5 by 16 in the section for fluid ounces instead of the one for cups -- my bad -- when I said the spreadsheet wasn't for novice users, I was including myself

. Let me redo the calcs for you again, using the right amount of acid -- I'll use 5 gallons.
So 5 gallons of full-strength Muriatic Acid would lower the pool pH to around 2.6 which sounds much more like an acid wash. To restore the pH using pH Up would take around 42 pounds (672 ounces weight), but that would result in the TA rising by 187 ppm when you were done (in practice, you'd add less pH Up and aerate some, but you'd still be adding a lot of TA -- when you add the acid, a lot of the carbon dioxide will outgas). If you used 83 pounds of 20 Mule Team Borax instead, then the TA rise would only be around 9 ppm, but the borates would increase by around 94 ppm. The most direct way to offset the acid is with a pure base -- lye / caustic soda / sodium hydroxide -- where it would take around 17 pounds to restore the pH with no change in TA and the only side effect being an increase in salt of around 240 ppm, but you would need to add something to increase the TA that was lost from the acid. So pH Up is actually your best bet so long as you don't overdo it.
If I assume that the Muriatic Acid treatment gets rid of most of the carbonates in the water, then adding 28 pounds of pH Up would restore the pH and would overshoot the initial TA by 55 ppm. If you added 22 pounds of pH Up, then you might get back to a pH of 6.7 from which you could aerate the water the rest of the way and end up with the same TA you had when you started.
So the rough rule-of-thumb is that every gallon of full-strength Muriatic Acid needs 4.4 pounds of pH Up to restore the TA. If you add enough acid to get the pH below around 3.0 (around 3 gallons of acid per 10,000 gallons of pool water), then aeration can restore the pH. If you are using less acid, then the amounts of pH Up indicated would raise the pH too much (but then this wouldn't be an acid wash).
Sorry for the miscalculation the first time. Even with The Pool Calculator not being correct, you were definitely a lot closer than I was.