Ted PerryPerspective based on aggregated and affiliated engineering team experience.
I see the Code Blue 40030 specified regularly for parking lot perimeters and campus pathways where you need a weatherproof PoE handoff at the pole. The IP68 rating is genuine submersion-grade protection, which matters when you're mounting cameras in areas prone to wind-driven rain or periodic flooding. The 802.3af injection at the mount point means you're running standard Cat5e/6 from your switch or midspan injector straight to the pole—no AC outlet hunting, no separate power drops.
One thing to confirm before ordering: verify your camera's actual power draw. 802.3af caps at 15.4W at the source, roughly 12.95W delivered after cable loss. Most fixed dome and bullet cameras stay well under that, but PTZ models and cameras with active IR arrays beyond 100 feet often exceed it and require 802.3at (PoE+) instead. If you're running cable longer than 200 feet or using older copper, factor voltage drop into your power budget. This kit works cleanly when your camera and cable plant match the 802.3af envelope—just don't assume all "PoE cameras" fit that spec.