Yes, yes and yes.
I've seen alot and wondered why hasn't this burnt? Extension cord to outlet strip to extension cord to another outlet strip. Every fuse is a 30A screw in fuses on older 14 gauge wire or knob/tube.
I just wanted to bring this back up.
It has started already with this heating season. We had, what could have been very bad, in a 4 unit apartment building. A smoking outlet which I thought was familiar when we arrived. Go upstairs, look at outlet, take it out of box and I can see drywall repair (******) marks on the wall. Smoke coming from the wall so I request an all call for off duty personnel.
Thermal imaging camera show entire section between floor joist as hot and growing hotter. I'm like where was the problem before as the previous call was 12-14 years ago. Off duty personnel arrive and a chainsaw is brought in to cut flooring, as OIC, I make the call to hold off before cutting up a wood floor.
We check bathroom in apartment below, find a hot spot on the ceiling and I open it up. Using my Becker tool I make a hole in the drywall. Black cellulose insulation falls out and there's a section burnt in half 14 gauge NM wire.
Further investigation found it was the previous repair from more than a decade ago. All four fuses boxes were side by side in the basement. Two showed heat damage. Out of 16 screw in fuses, 2 were 15A, 3-4 were 20A and the rest of them were 30A. All the wire except for a few newer additions were 14 gauge wire.
The first floor apartment had 2 small freezers plugged into a surge protector (outlet strip/zip cord). It's only a matter of time before we go back to that place. I told the guys back at the station, that was 2, the third will be a charm and it's going to be rock-n-roll.
Never under estimate the power of the renter or the slumlord and what they do or what they can accomplish with a screwdriver or extension cord.
I believe I'll start a PSA thread in FP.