I'd consider calling on most boards. Just because he acts firsts and shoves the rest of his chips into the pot with a PSB doesn't mean he has the nuts. The fact that you have the Ah FD with two overs, it's a snap call from me.
If villain has jj or a flush, you are not getting the right odds, 1 pr qq or worse, you are. I haven't done the math but you are probably right at 2 to 1, which puts you at break even. I should probably use equilab before i say that, but I'd guess it's close, depending on the shove range we give v. If it's sets or flushes only, it's a probably barely a fold because you have one or 2 fewer outs. If it includes top pair, draws, etc., you're in better shape.
If villain has jj or a flush, you are not getting the right odds, 1 pr qq or worse, you are. I haven't done the math but you are probably right at 2 to 1, which puts you at break even. I should probably use equilab before i say that, but I'd guess it's close, depending on the shove range we give v. If it's sets or flushes only, it's a probably barely a fold because you have one or 2 fewer outs. If it includes top pair, draws, etc., you're in better shape.
Call all day long. Give the villain a tight range of JJ, KQhh, KThh, QThh and add it AxKh which I think is reasonable for an aggressive player and you have 50%
If you take that down to just JJ, KQhh and AxKh your equity improves