This is Fortress Anchor guide...
http://fortressanchors.com/resources/safe-anchoring-guide
Chain link info...
1) The size of chain is by the diameter of the steel rod used to bend into the link. example: 3/8th chain is 3/8" rod.
2) The USA standard of tension strength has 125% over design, or you can corrode away 25% of the diameter and be at design loads. Thus the strength of chain is only as good as it weakest link.
3) Stainless steel chain is stronger in tension than carbon steel for same rod diameter.
4) Galvanized Chain is for show and not for much else. Why? Zinc coating scrapes off and how many hours in water versus a
dry anchor closet. Water is needed for grounded electrochemical reaction (corrosion). Rusted
dry steel is a good thing, but ugly.
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My 43' boat came with 3/8ths 250 feet of chain and 350' of nylon rode. That would let me anchor ≈90-110' of water with coral cutting bottom in normal weather conditions. I have the same anchor chain for my 2nd bow anchor thus reducing the main strain in foul weather.
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Anchor weight only helps sink the anchor faster.

You should match your anchor tension load strength to the chain/boat holding force. That link above suggests ≈3200 pounds of force tension load for your boat size in a single anchor in a tropical storm.
So...
How deep , How many anchors, and what sea state, What size windlass gypsy, do you plan for?