I am going to have to use plans to make ribs. This is the one part I have never been able to do from prints. I always break the balsa at some point. What is the best method of making intricate parts in balsa from prints?
No one's mentioned stack cutting yet.
Make templates for the tip and center rib out of some suitable material -- i.e. linoleum, 1/16" ply, aluminum, etc. I've used ply, aluminum and 1/32" steel from an old microwave oven case. Aluminum sheet has the best balance (IMHO) of strength & durability, although the steel I'm using has the dual advantages of being free and having an attractive fake woodgrain finish. Drill holes in the templates on the horizontal centerline, beyond the line holes. Make them the same size as your wing jig rods, if you're going to use one.
Drill holes in the rib blanks, of the same size and spacing as your templates. I cheat and use an X-Y table on my drill press, because I have one, but there are other nifty ways to do this that don't involve expensive machinery. At worst you can use a template as a drill guide.
Stack the templates and one wing panel's worth of blanks on brass tubing the same size as the holes and the same length as the size of the stack, then bolt the whole stack together. Now carve, sand, saw, and generally make balsa scrap until the ribs and templates form a smooth block. Take it all apart -- voila! you have ribs for half a wing. Repeat once (or three times for a biplane), and you're done.