My advice is to build the wing as stock, balsa spars and all, no webs, etc. When it is covered, it will be more than adequately strong. I built seven of them, and wing flex was never a problem. You can't judge the rigidity of an uncovered wing very well; if you did, you might be appalled at the general floppiness of an I-beamer..
It is the monocoque feature of the wing covering, being taut and resisting stretch, distributing loads smoothly over a large surface area which imparts the rigidity. When you're adding structure (say vertical webs between top and bottom spars), you need to ask yourself two important questions. 1) Would my webbing need to stretch if my structure flexes? and 2) does my web material resist stretch?
You also need to consider what your flexing problem is. Is it torsional (I'm assuming this is the concern with a Twister wing) or has it to do with vertical or horizontal loading? Under flight loads, have you noticed Twister wings sagging? Vertical webbing between the top and bottom spars would help that. Horizontal drag forces on the wing are almost never a problem, and vertical webs are orthogonal to such loads and not useful.
Of course, the webbing material itself might be (torsionally( rigid. If this is what you're depending on, consider using something besides balsa (say plywood) for webbing. Difficulties in achieving sheet stiffness have a much to do with the "2D" aspect of a flat sheet.
As wimpy as silkspan might seem, when it is doped and filled it becomes quite taut and strongly resists stretch (better than, say, plastic). Applied as a smooth 3D surface, it works amazingly well. That said, almost all of my Twisters had wings finished in Monokote which worked adequately well.
L.
"Sometimes when I reflect on all the beer I drink, I feel ashamed.
Then I look into the glass and think about the workers in the brewery
and all of their hopes and dreams. If I didn't drink this beer, they might
be out of work and their dreams would be shattered. I think, "It is better
to drink this beer and let their dreams come true than be selfish and
worry about my liver." -Babe Ruth