Smelling the plug it was obvious the fishy smell was coming from it
I've got a nose like a bloodhound for sniffing out hot electronics, but I've never thought of it as a fishy smell.
Ahhh,I was overthinking why it gets hot.I was somehow thinking it was something to do with magnetic fields within the coils
There is no magnetic field. The current in the live & neutral conductors are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction, so the magnetic fields they create are also equal and opposite, and therefore cancel each other out. That's how RCD circuit breakers work: two windings that cancel each other out until the live & neutral become unbalanced by an earth leak, then a third winding senses the field and trips the breaker. Winding wire like in an extension lead reel is how you go about making a wire wound resistor that's non-inductive.
Think how an electric fire works.
Wire coiled around an insulator.
Simple.
The same reason an electric fire gets hot. Coiled wire wit a current passing through it has that effect.
Electric fires get hot because the elements are made from resistance wire, and still will get hot if the wire is unwound.
The education system is not what it was.
Also, because the cable is coiled, not only does it obviously heat up, but the power output also increases. Think of the old style coils on a vehicle ignition system. 12 volts go in, but, several hundred come out the other end to power the spark plugs.
Ever had a shock of of a damp or broken HT lead or plug cap?
An ignition coil is just a transformer, and transformers don't produce any more power out than goes into them, because they're passive devices with no power supply. A hundred times more voltage just means a hundred times less current, and hence the
same power (less a little bit for losses).