I have seen a Fluke 77 that was returned "under warranty" because the arctrician tried to measure the primary side of a 11kV distribution transformer, and just grabbed the meter, and a long stick ( some thought there) to hold the probe near the connection. Inside the case was copper plated all the way down from display to input jacks, and there was no more copper on the board, other than the copper by components under the soldering. All blown off the soldermask, leaving bare board behind. Meter did not power on at all, the Fluke ASIC was there, missing the top of the package, and the thick film resistor network was cracked, and the resistors in it had marks of flash over on them for the input side one. Fuses were intact, along with the 9V battery, and the display was still working, put into another meter to verify, as that one was there because they had broken the display. Meter was scrapped, and the broken leads were also cut to pieces. New meter sent, along with the bill. I was still in school, visiting the one place that was a RS distributor (when RS catalogues were still the only way to get data sheets or more exotic IC's, and a 2 week wait for them to arrive) and which is still running these days.
By me the distribution transformer (200kVA, is 50m away, 300m cable wise, and the cable itself probably dates from 1900 in places, being the original paper insulated cable, and the feed to me is only around 60 years old, well worn SWA paper insulated and oil filled, complete with lead wiped ends. 400A fuses by the substation, a standard size, though there are still a good number with 200A fuses, that date from the 1950's, still in use, only replaced when they blow, and they will not blow for 400A of load as evening peak, measured that one evening.