When you first set up a tank ,the water can be cloudy for a week or two (or maybe even longer), especially if you didn't give your gravel a good rinsing before you put it in.
However, I recommend first you switch to a different water conditioner: you need ammonia in your tank for the tank to cycle, so any product that "loks up" ammonia will not be helping you. Also, you should never use chemicals to alter your pH. Even if your tap water's natural pH is a little low, don't sweat it--your fish will adjust to the lower pH and they will do better at an unnatrual pH than they would at an artificially raised pH (which is bound to fluctuate and stress them). Remember, stable is better than ideal!
Also, I assume you are cycling your tank with the ammonia your fish produce. This is not the recommended way to do this, as it is very hard for the fish, but since you already have the fish and I doubt have another tank to put them in why the tank cycles, I advise you to do a minimal 30% PWC's very regularly--even as much as every other day to every day. This will slow your cycle, since the PWC's will remove ammonia, but you need to keep your ammonia levels low for the survival of your fish.
If you have a test kit (and I recommend going and getting a liquid test kit--the strip ones are junk) then you readings should eventually be 0 ammonia, 0 nitrites, and <20 nitrates ppm. Right now, your ammonia will likely be up, with 0 nitrites and 0 nitrates. In a couple of weeks, it should begin to fall, and your nitrites will rise. After a bit more time, your nitrites will fall, and your nitrates will rise. The last thing means the tank is almost done cycling. Until that happens, you need to keep doing very regular PWC's.
In the meantime, you should go to the articles section of this site, and read the ones on the nitrogen cycle.
Good luck!