Stack-Packs were a huge improvement on a 64' ketch I used to work on. For that particular boat, we got them to prevent having to crawl out on the booms (either over a giant center cockpit bimini, or over an aft cockpit about 7-8 feet below) to wrestle sail covers around the lazy jacks. As such, the sails were much better protected once Stack-Packs were installed.
A surprise benefit was that it was possible to walk/crawl out to the end of the boom inside the Stack-Pack, even while underway, presuming there was at least one reef in a sail, or if it was lowered completely. (I can't remember what made that necessary, but it was a couple times.)
The big, heavy main sail on that boat dropped right into the pack, as intended. The mizzen was close to the size of a W32 main, and we found that the weight of the sail alone wasn't enough for it to reliably tuck itself fully into the pack when being lowered, so we'd still need to do a boom walk afterward to get it settled, but it was much better than before, and took less than a minute. With a Westsail boom being easily reachable from deck that wouldn't really be a problem, but'd be worth anticipating.
Do you already have lazyjacks on your boat? If not, do you wish you did? My K32 doesn't have them, which I'm fine with, and at this point the simplicity of just a sail cover outweighs the complexity of a Stack-Pack, even though I'm sure my sail would benefit from being covered more often, too. But if I had, or were thinking of adding lazyjacks at some point, the Stack-Pack would start making a lot of sense to me then.