Beelink U59 Drivers Review

After a fresh installation of Windows 10/11 (64-bit only), follow this sequence:

Perhaps the strangest driver quirk is the HDMI audio disappearance. After a fresh Windows install, the U59 often outputs sound via the 3.5mm jack but not through HDMI. The fix isn’t in Beelink’s driver pack—it’s in Intel’s Graphics Driver, which also contains the audio over DisplayPort/HDMI subsystem. Install the generic Intel GPU driver (not Windows Update’s version), and suddenly, your TV speaks again. But install the wrong version, and the system freezes on sleep. Precision matters.

Here’s the practical takeaway for any U59 owner: Beelink U59 Drivers

And always—always—create a system restore point before installing a driver. The U59 is forgiving, but not that forgiving.

Always prefer the Beelink-provided package for your exact U59 serial/model when available; otherwise use vendor (Intel/Realtek) downloads. After a fresh installation of Windows 10/11 (64-bit

There is a specific frustration known to U59 owners: You plug it into your 4K monitor, expecting crystal clarity, and instead, you get a display that looks like it’s stuck in a 2005 screensaver.

The culprit? Graphics Drivers.

The Intel UHD Graphics engine inside the U59 is capable of pushing 4K at 60Hz, but the generic Windows drivers are like a rusty bicycle compared to the Ferrari you actually have. Updating the Graphics driver unlocks features you didn't know existed—smooth video decoding, dual-monitor stability, and the ability to actually play that 4K YouTube video without your CPU spiking to 100%. It is the difference between looking at a screen and looking into a world.