October 17th, 2016 by Daniel Woida
With the launch of 2160p 4K Ultra HD streaming by YouTube, Vimeo, Amazon and the great drop in 4K TV selling price, more and more video fans who love extremely video quality are not satisfied with watching 2160p 4K Ultra HD online, but prefer downloading 2160p 4K Ultra HD to their 4K TV or other device that supports 2160p 4K Ultra HD to have an offline enjoyment. Now the following article will describe in details how to download 2160p 4K Ultra HD streaming video from YouTube.
Since video sharing websites, such as YouTube, does not support video downloading, so in order to download 2160p 4K Ultra HD videos from YouTube you must rely on a reputable YouTube to 2160p 4K Ultra HD video downloader. Most of users choose Allavsoft, the all-in-one video downloader for Mac and Widnows, to download 2160p 4K Ultra HD video from YouTube due to its following multifunction:
The following tutorial can work to download 2160p 4K Ultra HD video from YouTube, Vimeo, Amazon or download any video from Facebook, CBSNewss, Vine, etc.
Free download the professional YouTube 2160p 4K Ultra HD Video Downloader for Mac or Windows version - Allavsoft ( for Windows , for Mac) , install and then launch it, the following interface will pop up.
Open YouTube to find the 2160p 4K Ultra HD video that you want to download and then copy and paste this YouTube 2160p 4K Ultra HD video URL to Allavsoft. Or quickly drag and drop this YouTube 2160p 4K Ultra HD video URL to Allavsoft.
YouTube 2160p 4K Ultra HD video can be downloaded and saved into its original video format, 2160p 4K Ultra HD, easily by Allavsoft in default. Of course if you want to save the downloaded 2160p 4K Ultra HD video in other video format click "Automatically Convert to" button to find the output format suitable for you.
Click "Download" button and the YouTube 2160p 4K Ultra HD video will be downloaded very soon and easily.
4K resolution has two main standards: The DCI 4K resolution standard and UHD-1, or ultra-high-definition television (UHDTV). Television industry and video sharing websites, like YouTube, Vimeo, Amazon, etc often adopt the former one, UHD-1, as their 4K resolution standard.