Between that and your other posts I can see why the algae is persisting. 15,000 gallon pool, CYA at 60 ppm (on the high side), puck in basket chlorination, and maintenance shocking versus algae eradication shock treatment.
This forum has been provided me with tremendous assistance and I'll try to outline the basics, which uou can also find this is many threads. This is the basic process I've been successful with after following advice here when I opened to a nice green pool this spring.
References to adding chlorine is with liquid chlorine - ie. Sodium Hypochlorite. This is sold at pool stores as Pool Chlorine and is usually about a 10% concentrate. Sodium Hypochlorite is also sold as bleach everywhere else and is exactly the same as pool chlorine, the only difference is the concentration is 5.25% (standard) to 6% (Ultra, etc.) You need to read the bottle to check the strength. My pool has been crystal clear for 3 years with Walmarts generic bleach. Just be sure to only buy the regular bleach and not any product with additives for smell, etc.
FIRST STEP - KILL THE ALGAE
This requires bringing you chlorine up to shock levels and keeping it there until the algae is dead and the water is cleared up. Thoroughly brush your pool to loosen the algae, and run your pump 24/7 while in kill mode. That keeps things stirred up, helps filter out the dead algae and also kills the live algae inside your filter and system.
With 60ppm CYA your shock level is approximately 20 ppm of chlorine, which would take 3 gallons of 10% liquid chlorine or 6 gallons of 5.25% bleach to achieve. Add the chlorine slowly in the deep end where the water circulates well.
You will need to add chlorine at least once a day to keep that 20 ppm level up because the chlorine is "used up" killing the algae. If you have a test kit it likely doesn't test the chlorine up to that level, but you can at least make sure you haven't zeroed out. If in doubt, add chlorine. The worst thing you can do is back off the chlorine to early because the algae will bounce right back.
You will likely be able to visibly see if the algae is dead, but as ChuckD said, check that the combined chlorine is almost zero.
If you go in to the pool store for a chlorine reading, hum or block your ears, get the reading for you own use and get out of Dodge without letting them confuse you or sell you product you didn't go in there for. Just say thanks, I have some of that at home and keep moving. Most pool store staff don't know that bleach is Sodium Hypochlorite - save yourself grief and tell them you are using liquid chlorine!
The shock level came from a sticked thread with a chloine/stabilizer level table at http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showthread.php?t=365
Stabilizer . . . . . . Min. FC . . . . Max FC . . . 'Shock' FC
=> 60 - 90 ppm . . . . 5 ppm . . . . . 10 ppm . . .. 20 ppm
If you replace some water as posted here, the CYA will go down and you can do this before attacking the algae. A new CYA reading can be obtained and the the shock levels adjusted accordingly. Pool store readings are not bullet proof, I've gotten zero CYA readings when I knew it was around 20, so if there is another pool store handy perhaps a double check wouldn't hurt.
The amount of bleach/liquid chlorine is from the slick Bleachcalc program from this thread:
http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showthread.php?t=4735
You can calculate how much bleach or liquid chlorine is required for your pool volume to get the target chlorine level.
STEP TWO - CLEAN UP
After the algae has been killed you have dead organic matter in your pool. This may show up as lots of fine particles on the bottom and your water may appear cloudy or whiteish.
With my green pool this spring, there was a lot of dead algae to clean up. I would stop the pump for a few hours and let it settle on the bottom and vacummed to waste to get rid of it and not load up my filter. This uses some water but with your high CYA level, that's not a bad thing. Other than that, keep running the pump 24/7 and brush the pool well. You can keep your pool cleaner going as well.
I don't know what kind of filter you have, ours is sand so we just backwash to clear it out. If you have a filter cartridge, posts I have seen suggest it may clog up pretty quick and need to be washed out a lot, so watch for that.
The killing and cleaning process can take several days and you need to be patient. In my case I chlorine bombed the heck out of it and killed it all in a day and a half, and the water cleared over the next three. That was in cold conditions, a liner pool, and different neck of the woods so you experience may be different.
STEP THREE - BALANCE THE WATER AND MAINTAIN
After the algae situation is cleared up the best thing to do is get a complete read of your chlorine, PH, CYA, Alkalinity, etc., and NOT buy anything from the pool store! Post up your numbers to the forum and you can get some advice on balancing the water.
You also should get at least a cheap basic drops kit that measures chlorine and PH. That way you can keep an eye on the chlorine every day or 2 and make sure it doesn't get low which is the gateway for algae to grow back. My golden rule is to not let the chlorine go to less than the minimum level (per the chart). If you do that algae will not be a problem. You need to keep the basic PH, CYA and alkalinity balanced but it it won't matter if the chlorine goes to low and your pool isn't sanitized. If nothing else, keep a eye on the chlorine.
I like the liquid chlorine as there are no additives and I control what goes in the pool. You can still use pucks but be aware that have CYA added in and will raise the level. You will need to check the current CYA levels every once in a while and either adjust the amount of chlorine or swap out some water since CYA does not break down by itself during the season. Pucks aren't evil, you just have to know what's going on with your water.
Good Luck, it really is easy to handle.


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