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You're not "pot committed" unless you're getting the right pot odds, and generally we'd determine that by putting villain on a range, and calculating our equity relative to that range.
First off, yes your flop bet is too small. Go at least 70% on this texture flop, especially in a 3bet pot.
You need to know what pot odds you have. You're facing a $1.66 call for a $2.30 pot. You have 1.37:1, this number is your pot odds, not your SPR.
Your SPR is way more, you have $1.66 behind, and the pot is $0.64, giving you an SPR of around 2.6 (your stack is 2.6 times bigger than the pot).
You're certainly not pot committed here. That said, you do have an overpair, so you might be able to call this.
So, to give villain a range... do you have any reads? Is villain positionally aware? By that, we mean is he playing wider in early position than he should be? Does he tend to fold to 3bets? Does he overplay top pair? What about flush draws, or even QT? How does he play monsters in this spot, such as JJ/99/33? Does he even have 33 in his range?
Until you can answer these questions with a degree of confidence, you're kind of guessing whether or not we have the right pot odds. With this hand, if I had no reads on villain, I would probably call him, because at these stakes I'm seeing top pair and flush draws make this play. I'd also be inclined to think that a set would not want to scare away hands like QQ+.
I'd need solid reads that villain is not playing top pair and flush draws like this, but is playing hands like J9/99/JJ like this, before I fold this spot. I would likely be calling this.
But not because of SPR. It's because I believe villain's range is weak enough that our hand is ahead. If we're outright ahead of villain's range, we're always getting good pot odds.
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