The first digit is supposed to mean 1 for single speed, and 2 for dual speed (meaning it has a low range). The second digit was supposed to mean the number of modes it had, but then it changed to mean the strength rating. The 231 for instance was intended for Jeeps, while the 242 was intended for militay Humvees and full size trucks.
A 119 became a 129 just by making slight changes to add a 2wd mode. The case and viscous coupler is identical. The 129 had a low range planetary added near the input shaft to become a 229. It also happens that the rear case extension is clocked differently, but all of the castings and the majority of the internals are identical. The 128 uses the same open differential and other internals as the 129, except it doesn't have the viscous coupler around it. It and the 228 are also nearly identical. In other words the 119, 129, 229, 128, and 228 are pretty much identical.
Likewise the 242, 247, and 249 are nearly identical. The 242 has a crazy planetary in it but shares the same case castings and oil pump as the 249 with a shorter case extension. The 247 is essentiall a 249 with a progressive coupler instead of a viscous coupler. New Process based the progressive coupler design directly on limited slip differential designs. It does the same job as a viscous coupler, just superior in longevity, response, and reliabilty.
The 249 is a completely different Viscous Coupler than the old style used in the 119, 129, and 229. It better in alot of ways, but if it fails it doesn't have anything else. The 119 is completely different, it will continue to function just fine without it.