Below, I'll use "$\approx$" for the equality symbol in an equation, as opposed to "actual" equality.
Suppose $\mathcal{V}$ is a variety (in the sense of universal algebra) in the signature $\Sigma$. Say that a $\mathcal{V}$-unpacking is a set $\mathfrak{E}$ of $\Sigma\sqcup\Pi$-equations, for some signature $\Pi$ disjoint from $\Sigma$, such that for each equation $\sigma\approx\tau\in\mathfrak{E}$, the left hand side term $\sigma$ uses only symbols from $\Sigma$. Given a $\mathcal{V}$-unpacking $\mathfrak{E}$, let $T_\mathcal{V}(\mathfrak{E})$ be the set of $\Pi$-equations which are entailed by the equational theory of $\mathcal{V}$ together with $\mathfrak{E}$.
For example, let $\mathcal{E}$ be the variety generated by the algebra $(\mathbb{N};\mathit{exp})$ (where $\mathit{exp}$ is the binary exponentiation function). The singleton $$\mathfrak{M}=\{\mathit{exp}(\mathit{exp}(x,y), z)\approx\mathit{exp}(x, y\star z)\}$$ (with $\Sigma=\{\mathit{exp}\}$ and $\Pi=\{\star\}$) is an $\mathcal{E}$-unpacking, and unless I've made a silly mistake $T_\mathcal{E}(\mathfrak{M})$ should be exactly (up to symbol-renaming) the equational theory of $(\mathbb{N};\cdot)$.
I'm generally trying to get a better sense of how unpackings behave, motivated by questions about symmetry groups associated to terms (see e.g. here) as well as general interest in anything "implicit-definability-flavored." To get things started, I'm looking for a nontrivial negative example, and the following seems like a good candidate:
Letting $\mathcal{E}$ be as above, is there an $\mathcal{E}$-unpacking $\mathfrak{X}$ such that $T_\mathcal{E}(\mathfrak{X})$ is (up to symbol-renaming) the equational theory of commutative rings?
In general, though, I'm interested in any information about this notion. For example, I expect the relation $\mathcal{V}\trianglelefteq\mathcal{W}$ = "Up to change-of-symbols, $Th_{Eq}(\mathcal{V})=T_\mathcal{W}(\mathfrak{S})$ for some $\mathcal{W}$-unpacking $\mathfrak{S}$" to be non-transitive, but I don't immediately have a counterexample for this.