What makes sense to call a quotient (as sets) of the 2-adic numbers in which every element of a given equivalent class shares the same final convergent subsequence, e.g. $-\frac13\sim-\frac23\sim\frac13\ldots$?
For example $\overline{01}_2$ is a subsequence of $\overline{10}_2$ and vice versa, since either can be truncated to arrive at the other and therefore they are equivalent.
Is there any reason why that's not well-defined?
Define these classes by the graphing the orbit of the truncation function. Then you can say two numbers are equivalent if their graph is connected.
Is such an object well-studied?
Following the comments it is starting to look like say $\mathcal C/\overline{\mathcal C}$ where $\overline {\mathcal C}$ is the endpoints of the removed segments of the Cantor set.
In this case, isn't what OP asking simply $\mathbb Q_p / \mathbb Z[\frac{1}{p}]$ ?
– Arkady Jun 19 '22 at 04:53