The initial experiments on the Large Helical Device (LHD) have extended con
finement studies on currentless plasmas to a large scale (R = 3.9 m, a = 0.
6 m). Heating by NBI of 3 MW produced plasmas with a fusion triple product
of 8 x 10(18) m(-3).keV.s at a magnetic field strength of 1.5 T. An electro
n temperature of 1.5 keV and an ion temperature of 1.1 keV were achieved si
multaneously at a line averaged electron density of 1.5 x 10(19) m(-3). The
maximum stored energy reached 0.22 MJ with neither unexpected confinement
deterioration nor visible MHD instabilities, which corresponds to [beta] =
0.7%. Energy confinement times reached a maximum of 0.17 s. A favourable de
pendence of energy confinement time on density remains in the present power
density (similar to 40 kW/m(3)) and electron density (3 x 10(19) m(-3)) re
gimes, unlike the L mode in tokamaks. Although power degradation and signif
icant density dependence are similar to the conditions on existing medium s
ized helical devices, the absolute value is enhanced by up to about 50% fro
m the International Stellarator Scaling 95. Temperatures of both electrons
and ions as high as 200 eV were observed at the outermost flux sur face, wh
ich indicates a qualitative jump in performance compared with that of helic
al devices to date. Spontaneously generated toroidal currents indicate agre
ement with the physical picture of neoclassical bootstrap currents. Change
of magnetic configuration due to the finite beta effect was well described
by 3-D MHD equilibrium analysis. A density pump-out phenomenon was observed
in hydrogen discharges, which was mitigated in helium discharges with high
recycling.