Guys,
The weight of the boat is not important in determining anchor size.
It is surface area exposed to the wind that is important. All the Bav 38s, no matter what year or model have roughly the same surface area exposed to the wind. There is a great book, "Harbour Manouvres" written by a couple of Germans that has the figures on wind speed and forces on surfaces for typical boats. It also gives the ratios of above water and below water areas for some Bavaria yachts.
The biggest difference is the extra windage from slab furling sails, as opposed to in mast furling and whether you keep your spray hood and bimini up during a blow.
I'm a part time RYA instructor at Hamilton Island that just got hit by Tropical Cyclone Debbie last week. ( I left just before Debbie hit) Winds gusting to 150kn for 2 days. The boats that fared best were those that removed all sails, spray hoods and biminis before the blow and were in a marina. Most boat damage was sail damage caused by furling headsails not being removed and lines tied to cleats without proper snubbers. I strongly recommend that lines be taken to winches in extreme conditions.
Strongly recommend that the largest anchor you can fit to your roller is the way to go, no matter what your boat.
Craig
"Shirley Valentine"
Gold Coast
Australia