A viscous coupling is like two hands interlaced. If you kept one hand still and your fingers spread apart, the other hand could move forward and backward with each moving finger passing between two stationary fingers. Inside the coupling are strips of metal connected to one output that pass in close proximity to strips of metal connected to the other output. The strips pass each other without touching, but there is a viscous fluid surrounding them. That means that if you spin one output really fast and let the other go slack, the viscous fluid will not be able to easily push out of the way. The slack output will naturally feel like spinning along with the moving output. You can always stop the slack output if you hold it still since its not rigidly connected to the spinning output, but the viscous fluid lets some degree of torque be transfered from the spinning one to the stationary one. When the viscous coupling wears out, which all of our antique transfer cases are, then there is nothing connecting the front driveshaft and rear driveshaft like any other open differential transfer case. When the viscous coupling is new, you can grab one driveshaft yoke and hold it still while slowly spinning the other driveshaft yoke, but you will feel the stationary driveshaft wanting to spin unless you exert alot of pressure.