Hydration Packs
Discussion
tesco's, £9.99 gets you a reasonable one,Decathlon have a nice range of very practical ones for under a nifty, or you could spend an absalute fortune like my wife did for my birththday and get the very tidy Scott 2ltr hydration pack which has a massive compartment for everything including the kitchen sink.
moles No probs. Although, I actually tried to find a photo of the type of valve I've got on my Cloudwalker, but I can't find one. All the ones that come up on google images don't have the tap on. But they do have the bite valve, i.e. you have to buy or squeeze the valve end to allow the water to flow.
With Camelbaks it depends - some models give you the angled & tapped bite valve and on others you just get the straight-through bite valve. Couple of quid will get you one with a tap that you can swap it for though.

Hydrolock
To answer the original question, the Camelbak Mule is probably a good bet. Big enough for what you've listed but not too big.

Mule
For short rides I have a Rogue, which is just big enough for a few tools, phone and water.

Rogue
I also have an Octane which is much larger than a Mule (use it for commuting, so need the extra space for work clothes) but has a nifty zip & compression system so you can convert it into a smaller pack (not a lot bigger than a Mule) for all-day rides.

Octane

Hydrolock
To answer the original question, the Camelbak Mule is probably a good bet. Big enough for what you've listed but not too big.

Mule
For short rides I have a Rogue, which is just big enough for a few tools, phone and water.

Rogue
I also have an Octane which is much larger than a Mule (use it for commuting, so need the extra space for work clothes) but has a nifty zip & compression system so you can convert it into a smaller pack (not a lot bigger than a Mule) for all-day rides.

Octane
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